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The modern access-to-medicines movement grew largely out of the civil-society reaction to the HIV/AIDS pandemic three decades ago. While the movement was successful with regard to HIV/AIDS medications, the increasingly urgent challenge to address access to medicines for noncommunicable diseases has lagged behind-and, in some cases, has been forgotten. In this article we first ask what causes the access gap with respect to lifesaving essential noncommunicable disease medicines and then what can be done to close the gap. Using the example of the push for access to antiretrovirals for HIV/AIDS patients for comparison, we highlight the problems of inadequate global financing and procurement for noncommunicable disease medications, intellectual property barriers and concerns raised by the pharmaceutical industry, and challenges to building stronger civil-society organizations and a patient and humanitarian response from the bottom up to demand treatment. We provide targeted policy recommendations, specific to the public sector, the private sector, and civil society, with the goal of improving access to noncommunicable disease medications globally.

Original publication

DOI

10.1377/hlthaff.2015.0375

Type

Journal article

Journal

Health Aff (Millwood)

Publication Date

09/2015

Volume

34

Pages

1569 - 1577

Keywords

Access To Care, Chronic Care, Health Economics, International/global health studies, Chronic Disease, Communicable Diseases, Developing Countries, Drug Costs, Drug Industry, Drugs, Essential, Female, Global Health, Guidelines as Topic, Health Care Costs, Health Care Reform, Health Policy, Health Services Accessibility, Humans, Male, Policy Making, Poverty, Private Sector, Public Sector, Socioeconomic Factors