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Medicina
Background
In May 2011, the Portuguese Government signed a Memorandum of Understanding with the European Commission, the European Central Bank and the International Monetary Fund, including detailed measures to control health costs, allowing Portugal to receive a financial rescue package. This study aims to investigate medicines utilization in the outpatient sector during Troika’s financial rescue.
Methods
Using Defined Daily Dose per million inhabitants per year as a measurement unit, we compared medicines utilization with other relevant indicators over 5-year intervals for a total period of 20 years, based on a built-in inventory of national outpatient drug use using the Intercontinental Medical Statistics Health and Anatomical Therapeutic Chemical index of the World Health Organization databases. The calculation was made on the basis of both compound and year-on-year growth rates.
Results
With the exception of the interval 2009–11, an absolute rise in consumption was observed over the 20-year period. The downturn occurred prior to financial rescue, when expenditure management mechanisms were already in place, and coincided with an increase in out-of-pocket spending. With the decline of cost for patients, the access trend returned to being positive, but at a slower pace.
Conclusion
The rise in out-of-pocket and austerity measures may have led to decreased access to medicines. The findings of this study suggest that this impact was influenced by public cost-saving policies implemented even before the financial rescue. The results show that price reduction attenuated the repercussion of the measures.
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