Title: Pharmacovigilance in Public Health Programmes
1Pharmacovigilance in Public Health Programmes
- Dr M.R. Couper
- Quality Assurance and Safety Medicines
- Essential Drugs and Medicines Policy, WHO
2- Pharmacovigilance Programmes
- Public Health Programmes
- How to integrate pharmacovigilance into public
health
3Pharmacovigilance
- The science and activities relating to the
detection, assessment, understanding and
prevention of adverse effects or any other
drug-related problem.
4Aims of Pharmacovigilance
- to improve patient care and safety
- to improve public health and safety
- to contribute to the assessment of benefit, harm,
effectiveness and risk of medicines, - to promote education and clinical training
- to promote effective communication to the public
- to promote rational and safe use of medicines
5Major advances in pharmacovigilance
- Broadening scope to include traditional
medicines, medical devices, counterfeit products,
medical errors, counterfeit drugs. - Sophisticated technology such as Bayesian
Confidence Neural Network. - Communications- The Erice Declaration Dialogue
in Pharmacovigilance
6Guidelines in pharmacovigilance
- Guidelines for setting up a national
pharmacovigilance centre - A guide to detecting and reporting adverse drug
reactions - The importance of pharmacovigilance
- Pharmacovigilance in Public Health
7Pharmacovigilance in industrialized countries
- Considered an essential part of drug regulation
- Well-established systems for more than 25 years
- Regulatory systems - well-developed
8Pharmacovigilance in developing countries -
realities
- Easier access to any drug
- Regulation may not be well developed
- Quality issues
- Expired drugs
- Still considered a luxury
9Opportunities for PV in developing countries
- Use of traditional / alternative medicine
- Concern about safety of vaccines, cosmetics
- Drugs as a political issue
- USE OF DRUGS IN PUBLIC HEALTH PROGRAMMES
10Public Health
- Public health or community health is defined as
the science and art of preventing disease,
prolonging life and promoting health and
efficiency through organized community effort.
11Types of Public Health Programmes
- Education
- Lifestyle and behavioral changes
- Environmental modifications
- Nutritional interventions
- Drug administration programmes
- Mass control programmes
- Case specific programmes
- Individual treatment programmes
12Examples of Public Health Programmes in WHO
- Malaria programme
- Lymphatic filaraiasis programme
- Helminths programme
- Trachoma programme
- HIVAIDS programmes
- Vaccines programme
- Herbal medicines programme
13Strengths of Public Health Programmes
- Well established programmes using a limited
number of drugs or vaccines - Quality of product can be assured
- Large populations involved
- Numbers can be defined
- Operate according to standard guidelines
- Well-funded with international support
14Changing needs in Public Health
- Greater public expectations for access
- New drugs introduced
- Better communication needed for professionals and
consumers
15Weaknesses of Public Health Programmes
- No direct contact with a physician
- Disease may not be well-diagnosed
- Insufficient follow-up
- Patient information is inadequate
16Weaknesses of Public Health Programmes (Cont.)
- Newer, more potent products or combinations of
products are being used - Vulnerable populations such as pregnant women,
children and old people - NO METHOD FOR SAFETY MONITORING
17Two separate systems
- Pharmacovigilance Programmes
- Staff
- Resources
- Public Health Programmes
- Staff
- Resources
18Pharmacovigilance in public health
19REPORTING SYSTEM FUNCTIONAL AND STRUCTURAL
RELATIONSHIP
T r a c h o m a t i s
F i l a r i a s i s
T u b e r c u l o s i s
M a l a r i a
V a c c i n e s
W.H.O Programmes
INTERNATIONAL ADVISORY GROUP
WHO-PV (UMC)
MINISTRY OF HEALTH
F i l a r i a s i s
T u b e r c u l o s i s
M a l a r i a
V a c c i n e s
PV National Centres
National public health Programmes
NATIONALADVISORYGROUP
Health workers
Patients
20Roles of the various parties
- PH Programme Programme Manager
- PV Programme PV Officer
- Advisory Panels
- WHO
21Role of Programme Manager
- Collect data on
- Health outcome
- Morbidity, mortality
- Incidence and prevalence of disease
- ADRs
- Evaluate data and follow-up
22Role of Pharmacovigilance Officer
- Establish a data-base for ADRs
- Analyse and evaluate ADR data
- Submit important data to a review panel
- Follow-up if necessary
23Role of the Advisory Panel
- Reviewing and advising on ADR data collected in a
PH Programme - Providing advice for all safety monitoring
schemes of the PH Programme - Providing advice on training in safety monitoring
- Providing advice on further operational research
issues if deemed necessary
24Role and function of WHO
- serve as a repository of information
- integrate activities
- encourage and support operational research
- develop policies
- respond to special issues in drug safety
- develop and promote training materials
25Future of PV in Public Health Programmes
- Institutional development and capacity building
- Conducive Environment
- Networks are crucial
- Global advocacy is essential
26Pharmacovigilance in Public Health Programmes
- PHARMACOVIGILANCE IS NOT A LUXURY
- IT MUST BE INTEGRATED INTO PH PROGRAMMES
- SAFETY IS YOUR RESPONSIBILTY