Government says its working on ways of establishing an enabling policy, legal and regulatory framework for the rational administering of a drug, morphine, to patients suffering from HIV/AIDS and cancer in both public and private hospitals.
Lusaka Province Minister Charles Shawa says there is need to make the drug available to patients that require it though it is heavily controlled by both domestic and international laws.
which restricts its distribution, prescription and dispensation of the drug to patients.
Mr. Shawa said this in a speech read for him by Lusaka Province Deputy Permanent Secretary, Chinjili Zulu, when he officially opened a dissemination workshop for Morphine Factbook in Lusaka today.
He observed that the restrictive nature of morphine has cast fears on both health providers and patients from benefiting from the rational use of the drug in alleviating severe pain in patients.
Mr. Shawa said although, there is a number of proven palliative care drugs on the market, morphine has continued to be a drug of choice in pain management which he said is central to the care of chronically ill patients.
And speaking earlier, Lusaka Province Medical Officer, Dr Tackson Lambert said the Morphine fact book will be useful in dispelling myths and misconceptions that currently surround the usage of the drug.
Dr. Lambert said the book will also provide information to health care providers on how to access morphine for their patients including issues of its security and storage.
He recommended that the book should be made available to all authorized health facilities, legally prescribed health providers and duly registered pharmacies in government and private health facilities in the country.
ZANIS