Trade in substandard and falsified medicines

According to WHO, 10.5% of medicines in low- and middle-income countries are substandard or falsified (SF), which has a multidimensional impact on public health as well as severe economic and socioeconomic consequences. Constrained access, weak technical capacity and poor governance contribute to th...

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Détails bibliographiques
Auteurs principaux: Hagen, N, Hauk, C, Heide, L
Autres auteurs: Brombacher, D
Format: Book section
Langue:English
Publié: Nomos 2022
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author Hagen, N
Hauk, C
Heide, L
author2 Brombacher, D
author_facet Brombacher, D
Hagen, N
Hauk, C
Heide, L
author_sort Hagen, N
collection OXFORD
description According to WHO, 10.5% of medicines in low- and middle-income countries are substandard or falsified (SF), which has a multidimensional impact on public health as well as severe economic and socioeconomic consequences. Constrained access, weak technical capacity and poor governance contribute to the emergence of SF medicines. The increasing complexity of supply chains in our globalised world and the growing popularity of e-commerce provide numerous entry points for illegal medical products in both the Global South and the Global North. The COVID-19 pandemic led to a global surge in SF medicines. Various actors are involved in the trafficking of SF medicines. Key elements to combat SF medicines are prevention, detection and response with united, global participation of all parties involved.
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spelling oxford-uuid:fb2754b9-db76-4df4-88f4-dcd06737ebb22023-10-24T15:17:03ZTrade in substandard and falsified medicinesBook sectionhttp://purl.org/coar/resource_type/c_1843uuid:fb2754b9-db76-4df4-88f4-dcd06737ebb2EnglishSymplectic ElementsNomos2022Hagen, NHauk, CHeide, LBrombacher, DMaihold, GMüller, MVorrath, JAccording to WHO, 10.5% of medicines in low- and middle-income countries are substandard or falsified (SF), which has a multidimensional impact on public health as well as severe economic and socioeconomic consequences. Constrained access, weak technical capacity and poor governance contribute to the emergence of SF medicines. The increasing complexity of supply chains in our globalised world and the growing popularity of e-commerce provide numerous entry points for illegal medical products in both the Global South and the Global North. The COVID-19 pandemic led to a global surge in SF medicines. Various actors are involved in the trafficking of SF medicines. Key elements to combat SF medicines are prevention, detection and response with united, global participation of all parties involved.
spellingShingle Hagen, N
Hauk, C
Heide, L
Trade in substandard and falsified medicines
title Trade in substandard and falsified medicines
title_full Trade in substandard and falsified medicines
title_fullStr Trade in substandard and falsified medicines
title_full_unstemmed Trade in substandard and falsified medicines
title_short Trade in substandard and falsified medicines
title_sort trade in substandard and falsified medicines
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