Pursuing Pharmacoequity: Determinants, Drivers, and Pathways to Progress

Author:

Chalasani Rohan1,Krishnamurthy Sudarshan2,Suda Katie J.3,Newman Terri V.3,Delaney Scott W.4,Essien Utibe R.3

Affiliation:

1. Northwestern University

2. Wake Forest University

3. University of Pittsburgh

4. Harvard University

Abstract

Abstract The United States pays more for medical care than any other nation in the world, including for prescription drugs. These costs are inequitably distributed, as individuals from underrepresented racial and ethnic groups in the United States experience the highest costs of care and unequal access to high-quality, evidence-based medication therapy. Pharmacoequity refers to equity in access to pharmacotherapies or ensuring that all patients, regardless of race and ethnicity, socioeconomic status, or availability of resources, have access to the highest quality of pharmacotherapy required to manage their health conditions. Herein the authors describe the urgent need to prioritize pharmacoequity. This goal will require a bold and innovative examination of social policy, research infrastructure, patient and prescriber characteristics, as well as health policy determinants of inequitable medication access. In this article, the authors describe these determinants, identify drivers of ongoing inequities in prescription drug access, and provide a framework for the path toward achieving pharmacoequity.

Publisher

Duke University Press

Subject

Health Policy

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