SummaryThe COVID-19 pandemic has exposed the vulnerability of the European medicine supply systems, but the lack of access to medicines for diseases of poverty, including neglected tropical diseases (NTDs), is unfrequently brought to the attention of the European policy makers. As a result, clinicians in Europe are forced to “bricolage solutions” to treat NTDs: ad hoc donations from companies, product-specific donations via the World Health Organization (WHO) or WHO collaborating centres, case-by-case importation -sometimes from poorly regulated countries-, and possibly the recourse to compounding pharmacies. Noteworthy, NTDs are unlikely to decrease in the next years in Europe, due to increasing global mobility, and climate change expanding the parasites’ habitat. This serious but neglected problem was discussed at the 2025 European Congress in Tropical Medicine and International Health (ECTMIH) in Hamburg, Germany. This viewpoint analyses the availability, affordability and accessibility challenges in some countries in Europe, and their consequences at patient and health system level. It also proposes a set of interconnected recommendations and policy measures to make quality-assured medicines for NTDs sustainably available and affordable across Europe. Restoring access to these essential and sometimes life-saving medicines is critical for restoring the right to health for all in Europe, while protecting continental public health.

Inequitable access to medicines for neglected tropical diseases in Europe: health system vulnerabilities and a call for coordinated action / Ravinetto, Raffaella; Bottieau, Emmanuel; Fusco, Daniela; Marrone, Rosalia; Van Den Broucke, Steven; Tarrafeta-Sayas, Maria-Belen; Rinaldi, Laura; Losada-Galván, Irene; Calleri, Guido; Albonico, Marco. - In: THE LANCET REGIONAL HEALTH. EUROPE. - ISSN 2666-7762. - 63:(2026). [10.1016/j.lanepe.2026.101616]

Inequitable access to medicines for neglected tropical diseases in Europe: health system vulnerabilities and a call for coordinated action

Rinaldi, Laura;
2026

Abstract

SummaryThe COVID-19 pandemic has exposed the vulnerability of the European medicine supply systems, but the lack of access to medicines for diseases of poverty, including neglected tropical diseases (NTDs), is unfrequently brought to the attention of the European policy makers. As a result, clinicians in Europe are forced to “bricolage solutions” to treat NTDs: ad hoc donations from companies, product-specific donations via the World Health Organization (WHO) or WHO collaborating centres, case-by-case importation -sometimes from poorly regulated countries-, and possibly the recourse to compounding pharmacies. Noteworthy, NTDs are unlikely to decrease in the next years in Europe, due to increasing global mobility, and climate change expanding the parasites’ habitat. This serious but neglected problem was discussed at the 2025 European Congress in Tropical Medicine and International Health (ECTMIH) in Hamburg, Germany. This viewpoint analyses the availability, affordability and accessibility challenges in some countries in Europe, and their consequences at patient and health system level. It also proposes a set of interconnected recommendations and policy measures to make quality-assured medicines for NTDs sustainably available and affordable across Europe. Restoring access to these essential and sometimes life-saving medicines is critical for restoring the right to health for all in Europe, while protecting continental public health.
2026
Inequitable access to medicines for neglected tropical diseases in Europe: health system vulnerabilities and a call for coordinated action / Ravinetto, Raffaella; Bottieau, Emmanuel; Fusco, Daniela; Marrone, Rosalia; Van Den Broucke, Steven; Tarrafeta-Sayas, Maria-Belen; Rinaldi, Laura; Losada-Galván, Irene; Calleri, Guido; Albonico, Marco. - In: THE LANCET REGIONAL HEALTH. EUROPE. - ISSN 2666-7762. - 63:(2026). [10.1016/j.lanepe.2026.101616]
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Utilizza questo identificativo per citare o creare un link a questo documento: https://hdl.handle.net/11588/1044248
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