Public Education in Rational Drug Use: A Global Survey - EDM Research Series No. 024
(1997; 106 pages) [Spanish] Voir le document au format PDF
Table des matières
Afficher le documentAcknowledgements
Afficher le documentExecutive summary
Ouvrir ce répertoire et afficher son contenu1. Introduction
Ouvrir ce répertoire et afficher son contenu2. Background to the Survey
Ouvrir ce répertoire et afficher son contenu3. Methodology
Ouvrir ce répertoire et afficher son contenu4. Findings
Ouvrir ce répertoire et afficher son contenu5. Discussion
Fermer ce répertoire6. Conclusions and recommendations
Afficher le document6.1 Funding
Afficher le document6.2 Advocacy
Afficher le document6.3 Training and tools
Afficher le document6.4 Coalitions/partnerships
Afficher le document6.5 Lack of reporting/evaluation/publication
Afficher le document6.6 Organized opposition
Afficher le document6.7 Need for supportive infrastructure
Afficher le document6.8 Summary conclusions
Afficher le documentReferences
Ouvrir ce répertoire et afficher son contenuAnnexes
 

6.7 Need for supportive infrastructure

The lack of/need for a supportive infrastructure was cited by many respondents and highlights once again that public education cannot exist in a vacuum. The use of drugs by both consumer and health professionals is powerfully influenced by such issues as sources of drug availability and financing, prescribing behaviour, promotion, legislation and priorities in drug policy. It has been argued that in an unsupportive infrastructure public education may be a waste of time. This view seems unnecessarily defeatist and in the broader sense there are examples of consumer campaigns successfully contributing to infrastructural changes (such as legislation) that open the way to a more supportive environment for other public education activities. Perhaps the potential constraints represented by an unsupportive infrastructure underscore the critical necessity for programme planners to understand and investigate the presence of such constraints during the activity planning process. This highlights again the fact that educational activities do not take place in a vacuum but within a context in which people’s beliefs, practices and structural constraints have to be understood and taken into account.

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Dernière mise à jour: le 3 mai 2013