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Developing pharmacovigilance: new challenges and opportunities Mary Couper and Shanthi Pal Quality Assurance and Safety of Medicines.

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Presentation on theme: "Developing pharmacovigilance: new challenges and opportunities Mary Couper and Shanthi Pal Quality Assurance and Safety of Medicines."— Presentation transcript:

1 Developing pharmacovigilance: new challenges and opportunities Mary Couper and Shanthi Pal Quality Assurance and Safety of Medicines

2 WHO Programme for International Drug Monitoring
WHO HQ + 6 Regional offices WHO Collaborating Centre, Uppsala National Centres

3 Pharmacovigilance in WHO HQ
Exchange of Information Policies, guidelines, normative activities Country support Collaborations Resource mobilisation

4 World Health Organization
21 September 2018 WHO Programme October 2008 At the moment there are 86 full member countries and 30 associate member countries. To become an associate member country, the government of a country needs to send an official application to the WHO HQ in Geneva. To become a full member the country also needs to send at least 20 ADR reports in a correct format. Few member countries in Africa. X became a member in CCYY.

5 World Health Organization
Functions 21 September 2018 Receive and manage ADR data Develop tools; innovate Analyse: Signal detection :Identification of previously unknown drug reactions Communicate Support countries: train; search; technical assistance

6 What have we achieved in 40 years
118 National PV centres (89 full members +29 Associate members) Global ADR database: over 4 million reports In 2006: 37 Signals generated from database Some public health programs incorporating PV Gaining donor support

7 Juggling some questions….

8 Why is PV NOT getting the attention it deserves
About 40 years later: less than 100 'full' members 4 million+ reports But from where? Most reports from developed countries. Why is PV still a non event globally?

9 2007 Thalidomide was the reason for the programme …..in the 60s
Primary reason remains!!

10 World Health Organization
21 September 2018 125 Patients 24 Patients experienced ADRs (19%) Intro 2 (59%) were avoidable

11 Why do preventable errors occur

12 Where is the denominator?
4 million+ reports So What? Where is the denominator?

13 XX number of countries trained
So What? Why don’t they report?

14 Can we use our database more effectively?
What more can we do? Can we use our database more effectively?

15 Some ideas………

16 Consider traditional trends
Adverse drug reaction Adverse drug event Medicine safety Medicine toxicity Benefit /harm profile of a medicine Product emphatic Where is the patient?

17 Need to humanize what we do
Let's give pharmacovigilance a 'face' Let's talk about patient safety, not just medicine safety Ask the right question Instead of asking 'Is the medicine safe' Need to ask: Is the patient safe taking this medicine?

18 PV is about me !! Am I SAFE with this medicine?

19 Can we become more patient centred ?
Yes, we can!!

20 Reports of medication errors in WHO ICSR database in 2005

21

22 Pharmacovigilance system
Records medication related errors Analyses those errors Implements interventions Promotes patient safety Prevent 'preventable errors' Actionable learning system

23 WHO Patient Safety- Pharmacovigilance alliance
Collaborative project for the development of pharmacovigilance centres for patient safety Building on medication related expertise of the WHO-PV programme Reporting and learning through Root Cause Analysis systems Improve patient safety Partners: WHO-PV, WAPS, UMC, Moroccan centre for poison control and pharmacovigilance

24 Safety of medicines in WHO HQ

25 Low presence of some countries in the programme
Capacity building : multi regional, multilingual trainings, regional centres of excellence in PV Local evidence for the need for pharmacovigilance What gets measured, gets done (DG, WHO) Indicators for PV

26 Post-training: improving reporting
The know–do gap: understanding it Reporting tools expensive Vigiflow : free when used only as a reporting tool Also discuss 'incentives' CME points Feedback Access to Information

27 Lack of denominator / exposure data
Active surveillance to complement Cohort Event Monitoring Malaria, HIV Pregnancy registers To complement and NOT replace spontaneous reporting

28 What more with the database
EML Dependence liability Counterfeit detection Support RUD programme with evidence

29 Optimising 'Donor' interest
BMGF: HIV/AIDS proposal Malaria pregnancy registry Developing a global strategy EC: EC/ACP/WHO Partnership on Pharmaceutical Policies now in its 5th year Working with African countries to ensure a quality pharmaceutical response to malaria entering its second year Optimizing drug safety monitoring to enhance patient safety and achieve better health outcomes

30 What does the future look like
Maintain as the cheapest, easiest, most sustainable method As before (global spontaneous reporting, training) Better than before (Active surveillance studies in some countries, multilingual, sentinel sites) As never before (ISMN, WAPS, EML, RUD, Indicators, capital) Cohort event monitoring Network, support, measure, fundraise

31 Major planned activities for 2009
Development of a global strategy for pharmacovigilance to increase awareness PV landscape assessment for ascertaining state of the art Expansion of the programme with a focus on China and India More Francophone countries supported in PV Cohort event monitoring method developed, piloted in 2 African countries (in malaria) Indicators for PV Expansion and development of database Pilot project on medication errors strengthened / expanded to other centres Strengthening PV in HIV/AIDS PV capacity in countries supported

32 Pharmacovigilance is about me !!
Thank you Thank you


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