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Published in: Drug Safety 2/2013

Open Access 01-02-2013 | Leading Article

WHO Strategy for Collecting Safety Data in Public Health Programmes: Complementing Spontaneous Reporting Systems

Authors: Shanthi N. Pal, Chris Duncombe, Dennis Falzon, Sten Olsson

Published in: Drug Safety | Issue 2/2013

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Abstract

Globally, national pharmacovigilance systems rely on spontaneous reporting in which suspected adverse drug reactions (ADRs) are reported to a national coordinating centre by health professionals, manufacturers or patients. Spontaneous reporting systems are the easiest to establish and the cheapest to run but suffer from poor-quality reports and underreporting. It is difficult to estimate rates and frequencies of ADRs through spontaneous reporting. Public health programmes need to quantify and characterize risks to individuals and communities from their medicines, to minimize harm and improve use, to sustain public confidence in the programmes, and to track problems due to medication errors and poor quality medicines. Additional methods are therefore needed to monitor the quantitative aspects of medicine safety, to better identify specific risk factors and high-risk groups, and to characterize ADRs associated with specific medicines and in specific populations. The present paper introduces two methods, cohort event monitoring and targeted spontaneous reporting, that are being implemented by the WHO, in its public health programmes, to complement spontaneous reporting. The advantages and disadvantages of these methods and how each can be applied in clinical practice are discussed.
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Metadata
Title
WHO Strategy for Collecting Safety Data in Public Health Programmes: Complementing Spontaneous Reporting Systems
Authors
Shanthi N. Pal
Chris Duncombe
Dennis Falzon
Sten Olsson
Publication date
01-02-2013
Publisher
Springer International Publishing AG
Published in
Drug Safety / Issue 2/2013
Print ISSN: 0114-5916
Electronic ISSN: 1179-1942
DOI
https://doi.org/10.1007/s40264-012-0014-6

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