To sell or not to sell; the differences between regulatory and community demands regarding access to antibiotics in rural Ghana.
Samuel Afari-AsieduJohn KinsmanEllen Boamah-KaaliMartha Ali AbdulaiMargaret GyapongOsman SankohMarlies HulscherKwaku Poku AsanteHeiman WertheimPublished in: Journal of pharmaceutical policy and practice (2018)
The sale of antibiotics by LCS at the community level is influenced by both structural and individual contextual factors. There is a need to educate community members on the appropriate access and use of antibiotics in rural Ghana. In addition, rather than enforcing rules that go against practice, it may be more effective to regulate the sale of antibiotics by LCS and train them to make their dispensing more appropriate. CHPS compound could also be equipped to dispense some antibiotics to improve appropriate antibiotic access at the community level.