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Factors associated with Co-trimoxazole table inventory control-Assessment of primary health facilities in Lusaka Zambia

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Date
2015-04-13
Auteur
Sakala, M'sanide
Type
Thesis
La langue
en
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Résumé
The World Bank (1994) noted that over 80% of the original budget on health in most African countries is lost through inefficient practices at various levels, by various accountability failures in the supply chain for medical supplies. There have been reports of thefts, with no counter claims of losses, which could be inferred that facilities were not able to detect it due to failures in the accountability system or that there is rampant theft in the health facilities. An analytical cross-sectional study was conducted on panel data of a census of 21 health facilities. Data was collected using a data collection tool with respect to Co-trimoxazole tablet from first quarters of 2011, 2012 and 2013, giving 63 observations. The study revealed that 42 (66.7%) of all inventory record observations for Co-trimoxazole 480mg tablet had errors The facility observations with Inventory greater than 1% uncounted for, cumulatively translated to 1958 bottles by 1000 tablets of Co-trimoxazole tablets. By current MSL Dispatch Note (June 2014) pricing, this gave a monetary value of KR 84, 585.60, unaccounted for. In the analysis, Product density, Staff to Client Ratio, Indicator Product Turn-over and Proportion of Personnel Trained in Inventory Management, were found to be unrelated to Inventory record error. It, however, showed that increased use of inventory tools reduced the errors in inventory records (p-value = 0.015). The finding of the study revealed accountability challenges in inventory management at this level of service delivery. With the results down-playing the contribution of factors analyzed in this study, unknown causes, inclusive of theft, remain the dominant cause of Inventory Error in inventory management. It is therefore proposed that proportional allocation of human resource, reorganisation of record management, with establishment of regular financial and performance audits be made to help inventory management in health facilities.
URI
https://library.adhl.africa/handle/123456789/12676
Assujettir
Hospital Pharmacies-Inventory control-Zambia
Health Services-Zambia
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  • Medical Theses and Dissertations [957]

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