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Philippa Saunders Reports are emerging from the World Health Organisation (WHO) and
Pharmaciens Sans Frontiàres that quantities of unrequested and
unusable medical drugs, sent by governments and others in response to
the Kosovo crisis, are contributing to the postwar chaos.
Despite the WHO's best efforts to control drug supplies, a pattern of
inappropriate donations, familiar in many other crises, has again
emerged. Additional resources will have to be found to sort and dispose
of what amounts to a stockpile of chemical waste.
It seems that in every humanitarian disaster drug donations take on a
life of their own; a cyclical pattern emerges which is resistant to
disciplined procedures and defies common sense. As soon as any disaster
reaches our television screens, drugs that fail to meet the most
urgent, or any, real health needs are dispatched. They arrive in small
and large boxes, often without any indication of the contents; some are
even half used. They may lack labelling, or be labelled in a language
that cannot be read in the region. Some are out of date or nearing
their expiry date.
Why does this happen repeatedly in every emergency? The WHO reports
that a similar picture was true after Hurricane Mitch. The answer may
be that one of the first and most understandable responses to scenes of
human misery is to send medical aid. The desire to respond quickly
overrides good practice.
Governments come under political and media pressure to be seen to be
acting The WHO Interagency Guidelines for Drug Donations, developed three
years ago, are beginning to have some impact on this longer term aid.
Philippa Saunders is manager of the Essential Drugs Project, an
organisation which supports rational use of drugs in developing countries (email: edp{at}gn.apc.org).
half of the unusable drugs in the Kosovo crisis were sent by
governments. In the postwar situation aid agencies, small charities,
and church groups continue the flow of medicines in an effort to help
reconstruct health services, and so the pattern is perpetuated. The tax
rebates that some governments make available to companies for
charitable "gifts in kind" may in some cases encourage poor quality donations.

(Credit: PHARMACIENS SANS FRONTIERES)
Drugs for crisis areas often arrive after their expiry date
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