Pharmacovigilance: A public health priority for South Africa.

South African Health Review Pub Date : 2017-01-01 Epub Date: 2017-08-23
Ushma Mehta, Emma Kalk, Andrew Boulle, Portia Nkambule, Joey Gouws, Helen Rees, Karen Cohen
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Abstract

South Africa has been engaged in pharmacovigilance (PV) activities to assess the impact of adverse drug reactions on public safety and health for 40 years. Activities have evolved from passive regulatory reporting to encompass active surveillance systems. The HIV and AIDS and TB epidemics stimulated pharmacoepidemiological research into the risks associated with medicines used in the standardised regimens of mass treatment programmes. Specific safety concerns, supported by robust local cohort data, have prompted major changes to national and international treatment policies. This chapter describes the expanding body of local knowledge and the historical and emergent surveillance systems that address the burden of drug-related harms, noting the challenges to health system responsiveness. The South African context presents a unique opportunity to characterise the scale and nature of such harms in mass HIV and AIDS and TB treatment programmes. The use of complex regimens at scale poses new PV challenges. There is an urgent need to develop cohesive, sustainable systems to support evidence-based decisions on appropriate regimen choices, while minimising medicine-associated risks. The increasing use of computerised clinical, laboratory and dispensing records, with unique patient identifiers facilitating data linkage, will increase PV surveillance capacity. A coherent national PV framework is an essential part of medicines policy, encompassing regulatory, programmatic and individual needs. Key pillars of this framework include: (i) consolidation and expansion of active and passive PV surveillance, optimising existing programmes; (ii) prioritising post-marketing monitoring within the new health products regulatory authority; and (iii) instilling a culture of active risk management in clinical practice through the creation of effective channels of communication and feedback into policy and practice.

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药物警戒:南非的公共卫生优先事项。
40年来,南非一直在开展药物警戒活动,以评估药物不良反应对公共安全和健康的影响。活动已经从被动的监管报告演变为主动的监测系统。艾滋病毒和艾滋病以及结核病的流行促使药物流行病学研究与大规模治疗规划的标准化方案中使用的药物相关的风险。在可靠的本地队列数据的支持下,具体的安全问题促使国家和国际治疗政策发生重大变化。本章描述了不断扩大的地方知识体系,以及处理药物相关危害负担的历史监测系统和紧急监测系统,并指出卫生系统应对能力面临的挑战。南非的情况提供了一个独特的机会,可以描述大规模艾滋病毒和艾滋病以及结核病治疗规划中此类危害的规模和性质。大规模使用复杂方案带来了新的光伏挑战。迫切需要建立有凝聚力的、可持续的系统,以支持基于证据的适当方案选择决策,同时最大限度地减少与药物相关的风险。越来越多地使用计算机化的临床,实验室和配药记录,具有独特的患者标识符,促进数据链接,将增加PV监测能力。连贯的国家PV框架是药品政策的重要组成部分,包括监管、规划和个人需求。该框架的主要支柱包括:(i)巩固和扩大主动和被动光伏监测,优化现有方案;(ii)在新的保健产品监管机构内优先进行上市后监测;(iii)通过建立有效的沟通渠道,将积极的风险管理文化灌输到临床实践中,并将其反馈到政策和实践中。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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