Pharmacy supply chain - JASE Medical

Drug Shortages: Causes & Solutions

While things are being done at the national level to combat global shortages, there’s more individuals can do at home.

Antibiotic Intervention Secondary Image

The Complexities of Prescription Drug Shortages

Prescription drug shortages have reached unprecedented levels in recent years, disrupting the supply of essential medicines such as, antibiotics, cancer chemotherapies, ADHD medications, and diabetes and weight-loss treatments. These shortages compromise patient care, strain healthcare resources, and place an economic burden on the system. Here we’ll explore the multiple reasons behind drug shortages and examine the efforts being made to ensure patients have continuous access to the medications they need.

Understanding Drug Shortages

A drug shortage occurs when either the actual demand or projected demand for a medication exceeds the available supply. According to the American Society of Health-System Pharmacists (ASHP), active drug shortages in the US reached an all-time high of 323 during the first quarter of 2024, surpassing the previous record set in 2014. The situation is similarly dire in the UK, with the British Generic Manufacturers Association reporting a 100% increase in medicine shortages between January 2022 and January 2024.

Antibiotic Intervention Secondary Image

Causes of Drug Shortages

  • Sudden Demand Spikes: Unexpected increases in disease prevalence, such as the rise in Strep A cases among UK children in 2022, lead to a surge in demand for children’s antibiotics. Only a year later, a drastic shortage of children’s antibiotics hit the U.S. in the beginning of the school year in 2023. Each year we face an amoxicillin shortage leading up to and into the start of the school year. Safeguard your kids from these shortages with a KidCase (which includes amoxicillin).
  • Manufacturing and Quality Issues: Recalls, quality problems, or failed regulatory inspections can cause sudden drops in supply. For example, when Indian manufacturer Intas failed a US FDA inspection in 2023, it triggered a nationwide shortage of cisplatin and carboplatin cancer chemotherapies.
  • Raw Material Shortages: Scarcity of active pharmaceutical ingredients (APIs) or delivery mechanisms can contribute to drug shortages. The geographic concentration of API manufacturing in China and India heightens the risk of global supply disruptions.
  • Economic Factors: Extreme price competition among generic manufacturers can undermine investment in manufacturing capacity, quality assurance, and supply chain reliability. Lower-priced drugs are more likely to experience shortages due to a lack of incentives for production.
  • Natural Disasters and Geopolitical Events: Incidents like the 2023 tornado that hit a Pfizer plant in the US can destroy manufacturing facilities. Geopolitical factors such as Brexit, the Ukraine-Russia war, and the Covid-19 pandemic have also significantly impacted drug supplies.

| In the first quarter of 2024, drug shortages in the U.S. hit an all time high, surpassing the previous record set in 2014. |

 

Protocols for Managing Shortages

Many countries have established national reporting systems to facilitate communication about drug shortages. In the US, manufacturers can notify the FDA Drug Shortage Staff via a web portal, and the FDA’s list is updated daily. The FDA works with manufacturers to address shortages and may seek alternative suppliers or importation of products. Also, the American Society of Health-System Pharmacists (ASHP) maintains an up to date list of current drug shortages.

Similarly, in the UK, the Department of Health and Social Care (DHSC) liaises with manufacturers, alternative suppliers, and wholesalers to secure additional supplies. The DHSC has also introduced serious shortage protocols (SSPs) to allow pharmacists to offer alternative products when items are in short supply.

Regulatory agencies like the FDA and the Medicines and Healthcare products Regulatory Agency (MHRA) can take various actions to mitigate shortages, but these are often controversial. Such actions can include: expediting approval processes, granting temporary labeling exemptions, and allowing the importation of unlicensed medicines.

Antibiotic Intervention Secondary Image

Efforts to Prevent Future Shortages

  1. Critical Medicines List: In addition to the FDA and ASHP drug shortage lists maintained in the U.S., the European Medicines Agency (EMA) published a list of over 200 critical medicines to prioritize for shortage prevention. The list will be expanded and updated annually.
  2. Supply Chain Resilience Recommendations: The EMA has gone a step further by issuing recommendations for global suppliers to address vulnerabilities in the production and delivery of critical medicines. These include stockpiling, reviewing past shortages to identify demand patterns, and increasing manufacturing capacity.
  3. Policy Solutions: Legislators in the U.S. have proposed funding domestic manufacturing to combat supply chain issues. The Senate Finance Committee has drafted a bill to incentivize hospital contracting practices that ensure adequate drug supplies.
  4. Appointment of Supply Chain Coordinator: The U.S. Department of Health and Human Services has appointed a supply chain resilience and shortage coordinator to lead efforts in strengthening critical medical supply chains.

In summary

Prescription drug shortages pose a significant challenge to healthcare systems and patients worldwide. The interplay of factors, from sudden demand spikes and manufacturing issues to economic pressures and geopolitical events, requires broad and collaborative approach to ensure patients have uninterrupted access to essential medicines. While national reporting systems, regulatory actions, and policy initiatives aim to mitigate the impact of shortages, more work is clearly needed to address the root causes and build resilience in the global pharmaceutical supply chain.

One thing that individuals can do to hedge against supply shortages and medication availability is have their own supply. Maintaining a personal supply of emergency medications like antibiotics and treatments for sudden illnesses is both prudent and possible. That is why we make the Jase Case—for these unpredictable circumstances.

Additionally, our Jase Daily service can provide you an extended supply of your daily medications for chronic conditions, offering a larger quantity than is typically available through your local physician and pharmacy.

Give yourself the peace of mind you deserve.

– Your partners in preparedness: Jase.com

 

Lifesaving Medications

Everyone should be empowered to care for themselves and their loved ones during the unexpected.

Recent Posts

Keeping you informed and safe.

Low-Cost and No-Cost Emergency Preparedness Measures

Low-Cost and No-Cost Emergency Preparedness Measures

Small steps today, mean a safer tomorrow for you and your loved ones. Low-Cost and No-Cost Emergency Preparedness So far in our series for National Preparedness Month this September, we've already covered How to Make an Emergency Plan for Your Household and How to...

read more
How to Build A Home Emergency Kit

How to Build A Home Emergency Kit

A thoughtfully crafted emergency kit can become a lifeline for your family after a disaster. How to Build a Home Emergency Kit In an unpredictable world, being prepared for emergencies is not just a precaution—it's a necessity. A well-stocked home emergency kit can be...

read more
How to Make an Emergency Plan for Your Household

How to Make an Emergency Plan for Your Household

Planning is the difference between panic, and preparedness.  How to Make an Emergency Plan for Your Household When disaster strikes, the difference between panic and composure often comes down to one thing: preparation. While we can't predict emergencies, we can...

read more
What to Do if Your Medication is Out of Stock?

What to Do if Your Medication is Out of Stock?

You depend on your medications, but what if you can't get them?   Navigating Prescription Stockouts Being prepared could save your life. In recent years, prescription drug shortages have become an increasingly common and distressing problem for patients across...

read more

Join Our Newsletter

Our mission is to help you be more medically prepared. Join our newsletter and follow us on social media for health and safety tips each week!

Are You One of the 14 Million Living in a Pharmacy Desert?

Scenario this winter

All the pharmacies have shut down or are on strike within a 2-hour radius of your home. Your daughter is in the beginning states of a full-blown asthma attack. You reach for her inhaler and find it empty, and no extra cartridges are to be found. The carton of nebulizer solution is also empty. Your child is wheezing and in panic mode. You try to console and calm her down, knowing anxiety will make symptoms worse. Frantic, you call her doctor. They advise going to the ER, which is almost as far away as the nearest pharmacy. Hospitals and clinics are overrun with patients with influenza, COVID, and a new virus that hasn’t yet been identified. Desperate, you call around to clinics, trying to find inhalers and there are none to be found.

You knew she was running low on her medication-you thought you had more time; it was on your To Do List. You should have planned better.

Don’t get caught off guard when it comes to your children’s health.

Pharmacy deserts coming to a city near you

The combined closing of over 1500 pharmacies over the past 2 years (Walgreens, CVS and Rite Aid) and the gap these have left in access to medication is massive. Mail order and online pharmacies are filling the gap for chronic medications, however acute illnesses, pain medications and antibiotics are still prescribed and filled on the local level.

Pharmacies are shuttering their doors due to theft, finances, and widespread strikes. Supply chains in medications, food and everyday necessities are projected to be severely disrupted. Some medications may completely disappear altogether. We don’t make our many of our own medications in the states, so we are massively dependent upon China and India for most of our pharmaceuticals.

According to an independent study done September 2021, by Goodrx Health, 40 % of counties (representing over 41 million people) in the US are pharmacy deserts,-it takes over 15 minutes to drive to nearest pharmacy. South Dakota, Montana, Nebraska, and Kansas have the largest number of counties that lack sufficient access to a local pharmacy. In addition, the white paper reveals that 80% of counties lack adequate healthcare infrastructure. Over a third of the U.S. population lives in a county where there is less than adequate access to pharmacies, primary care providers, hospitals, trauma centers, and/or low-cost health centers.

Like it or not, this is the new world we find ourselves in. This post COVID, world war 3, supply chain disruption, and medication shortages world. Add the possibility of nuclear war on the horizon. And potential food shortages. If this isn’t enough, widespread food poisonings have been reported, from contaminated onions, pork products, beef and poultry meatballs, burritos and more. (Find the complete up to date list from the FDA and bookmark this page for reference).  It’s enough to overwhelm even the most organized and prepared individual.

We will need to pull all our resources, keep a cool head, and focus on priorities.

2 is 1 and 1 is none. This can mean 2 things. First- if you are using up the product (such as an inhaler cartridge), and you don’t have an extra one in for the next time it is needed, you are now down to none. Another meaning-if one cartridge fails or malfunctions and you don’t have a backup, you are down to none-. Have extra lifesaving medicine or devices on hand.

As stated above, online and mail order pharmacies can fill the gap- but not for acute medications. And because of supply chain disruptions- or altogether shutdowns- you may be forced into seeking help at the nearest hospital or walk in clinic. Which is the very last place you want to be. Is your medicine chest stocked with supplies needed for all emergencies? Check out Jase Case and Jase Daily for your emergency stock of medications.

- Brooke Lounsbury, RN

Medical Content Writer

Lifesaving Medications

Everyone should be empowered to care for themselves and their loved ones during the unexpected.

Recent Posts

Keeping you informed and safe.

Low-Cost and No-Cost Emergency Preparedness Measures

Low-Cost and No-Cost Emergency Preparedness Measures

Small steps today, mean a safer tomorrow for you and your loved ones. Low-Cost and No-Cost Emergency Preparedness So far in our series for National Preparedness Month this September, we've already covered How to Make an Emergency Plan for Your Household and How to...

read more
How to Build A Home Emergency Kit

How to Build A Home Emergency Kit

A thoughtfully crafted emergency kit can become a lifeline for your family after a disaster. How to Build a Home Emergency Kit In an unpredictable world, being prepared for emergencies is not just a precaution—it's a necessity. A well-stocked home emergency kit can be...

read more
How to Make an Emergency Plan for Your Household

How to Make an Emergency Plan for Your Household

Planning is the difference between panic, and preparedness.  How to Make an Emergency Plan for Your Household When disaster strikes, the difference between panic and composure often comes down to one thing: preparation. While we can't predict emergencies, we can...

read more
What to Do if Your Medication is Out of Stock?

What to Do if Your Medication is Out of Stock?

You depend on your medications, but what if you can't get them?   Navigating Prescription Stockouts Being prepared could save your life. In recent years, prescription drug shortages have become an increasingly common and distressing problem for patients across...

read more

Join Our Newsletter

Our mission is to help you be more medically prepared. Join our newsletter and follow us on social media for health and safety tips each week!

New Product | Check out our UseCase: UTI kit!

X