SONAR|HES-SO

SONAR|HES-SO

SONAR|HES-SO regroupe les travaux de bachelor et master diffusables de plusieurs écoles de la HES-SO. Consultez cette page pour le détails.

En cas de question, merci de contacter les bibliothécaires de la HES-SO : bibliotheques(at)hes-so.ch

Bachelor thesis

The effectiveness of the Swiss and Canadian antibiotic distribution system compared

    2020

127 p.

Mémoire de bachelor: Haute école de gestion de Genève, 2020

English The aim of research paper was to explore the current antibiotic distribution system in Switzerland, as well as all the important players of this complex industry. In order to better understand how this industry functions. It is important to get a big picture by understanding the implication of pharmaceutical companies, health insurance companies, hospitals, doctors, pharmacies and drugstores, and finally the role of the government and other higher instances. The pharmaceutical world is a highly regulated and complex environment and to better understand how the pharmaceutical industry functions, it was important to understand the regulations and guidelines to follow. Furthermore, Canada was use throughout this paper as a comparison. The aim was to understand the Canadian key players, how their system functions. The global health care market was an estimated worth of more than US$ 8’452 billion in 2018 and is dominated by few key players such as Novartis, Roche, Pfizer (Businesswire 2019; Mikulic 2020). These key players are responsible for medication supply throughout the world, including antibiotics. Antibiotics have revolutionized society, when discovered in the early 20s, by Alexander Fleming. They have since helped fight several deadly infections. Antibiotics were a great contribution to the medical world; however, bacteria have, over the years, started to show resistance to certain antibiotic treatment. Scientifics and medical professionals are raising alarm bells to tackle antimicrobial resistance (AMR). The Swiss antibiotic distribution system is highly regulated and conducted in two different ways. One part of Switzerland dispenses antibiotics solely through doctors, the other part only through pharmacies, whereas 2 cantons are exceptions, and have a dual distribution system. Furthermore, an estimate 30 percent of total medication is wasted yearly in Switzerland (Tornare 2017). The Swiss health sector is seeing its prices and costs rise year over year and inefficiency arise. Politicians try to address the inefficiency problem, but their means are only limited. This paper intends to give a clear overview of the complex Swiss health care system. It will also compare the Swiss health care system and its key stakeholders with Canada to understand what is done differently and where there could be improvements. A combination of primary and secondary data will be used to address the effectiveness of the Swiss and Canadian antibiotics distribution system.
Language
  • English
Classification
Economics
Notes
  • Haute école de gestion Genève
  • International Business Management
  • hesso:hegge
License
License undefined
Identifiers
  • RERO DOC 329839
Persistent URL
https://sonar.ch/hesso/documents/314971
Statistics

Document views: 55 File downloads:
  • TBIBM_2020_JANETT_Sophie.pdf: 207