Voluntary information and price sharing database–a scoping review of the pricing and procurement landscape across eight Commonwealth Member States
| المؤلف | Kebirungi, Bridget |
| المؤلف | Ocran, Phyllis |
| المؤلف | Kamere, Nduta |
| المؤلف | Mabote, Lynette Keneilwe |
| المؤلف | Osi, Ngozi |
| المؤلف | Joshi-von Heyden, Meghna |
| المؤلف | Gilmour, Emily |
| المؤلف | Mghamba, Janneth |
| المؤلف | Robinson, Layne |
| المؤلف | Babar, Zaheer Ud Din |
| المؤلف | Rosado, Helena |
| المؤلف | Rutter, Victoria |
| تاريخ الإتاحة | 2025-10-22T08:21:29Z |
| تاريخ النشر | 2025-07-15 |
| اسم المنشور | Journal of Pharmaceutical Policy and Practice |
| المعرّف | http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/20523211.2025.2523937 |
| الاقتباس | Kebirungi, B., Ocran, P., Kamere, N., Mabote, L. K., Osi, N., Joshi-von Heyden, M., ... & Rutter, V. (2025). Voluntary information and price sharing database–a scoping review of the pricing and procurement landscape across eight Commonwealth Member States. Journal of Pharmaceutical Policy and Practice, 18(1), 2523937. |
| الرقم المعياري الدولي للكتاب | 2052-3211 |
| الملخص | Background: The Commonwealth Health Ministers’ meetings (2021–2023) identified medicines shortages, pricing, and price transparency as critical issues. This led to the establishment of the Voluntary Information and Price Sharing Database (VIPSD) in 2021, aimed at enhancing procurement transparency, reducing costs, and sharing information on health products amongst member states. However, adoption has been limited due to competing initiatives like pooled procurement systems introduced during the pandemic. Methods: This scoping review focused on eight Commonwealth countries: Bangladesh, Dominica, Kenya, Malaysia, Malta, Solomon Islands, South Africa, and St. Vincent and the Grenadines. Nations were selected to represent diverse health systems, population sizes, and procurement practices. External researchers conducted literature reviews and standardised data collection to ensure consistency. Results: The review revealed varied pricing policies and procurement frameworks. Nations like Malta, Bangladesh, Malaysia, and South Africa had pharmaceutical policies ensuring affordability, while others lacked comprehensive pricing policies. Seven countries implemented pooled procurement programmes, enhancing value and reducing costs; three nations operated national health insurance schemes affecting medicine pricing. Five countries used pharmaceutical management information systems to streamline procurement. Despite these efforts, disparities persist due to fragmented frameworks, stock-outs, budget constraints, and delayed procurement processes. Conclusion: The VIPSD was identified as a potentially transformative tool to enhance transparency, promote fair pricing, improve collaboration, and ensure equitable access to innovative health products. To maximise its impact, the database requires clear scope definition, comprehensive data collection, funding, and robust maintenance. Expanding its adoption could help mitigate price disparities and strengthen medicine accessibility across Commonwealth member states. |
| راعي المشروع | This study was partially supported by the Commonwealth Secretariat. |
| اللغة | en |
| الناشر | Taylor and Francis |
| الموضوع | health information technology medicine access Medicine price pharmaceutical supply chain procurement VIPSD |
| النوع | Article |
| رقم العدد | 1 |
| رقم المجلد | 18 |
| ESSN | 2052-3211 |
الملفات في هذه التسجيلة
هذه التسجيلة تظهر في المجموعات التالية
-
أبحاث الصيدلة [1453 items ]


