新兴经济体的药物警戒:壁垒之间的相互作用模型

IF 2.6 Q3 MANAGEMENT
A. Loomba
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引用次数: 1

摘要

本文的主要目的是识别和排名新兴经济体背景下药物警戒(PV)的各种障碍,并使用解释结构建模(ISM)方法检查它们之间的相互关系。其结果是一个模型,提供了关于如何通过健全的国家光伏系统实现合理和安全使用药物并确保患者安全的见解。设计/方法/方法本文开发了一个模型,使用ISM方法来分析光伏屏障之间的相互作用。根据临床和医疗产品开发专家的意见,确定并审查了新兴经济体的光伏壁垒。在驱动/依赖能力的背景下,分析了光伏壁垒之间的层级相互关系。研究结果确定了主要的光伏障碍——缺乏资源/基础设施、立法薄弱、不公平的疾病负担、缺乏光伏产能、培训和执法权力——这些障碍驱动或强烈影响了其他障碍,阻碍了新兴经济体实施强大的国家光伏系统。制药行业因素是PV障碍,被认为是自主的,这意味着它们与其他障碍相对脱节,患者PV实践障碍强烈依赖于其他障碍。本文为政策制定者和决策者提供了一个框架,以支持进一步研究新兴经济体主要光伏壁垒之间的相互依赖关系。它可以作为进一步研究的动力,有可能扩大对光伏系统如何以及为什么可能无效的理解。未来的研究可以计划应用ISM方法来研究发达经济体背景下的光伏壁垒,并通过对比这些研究的结果,为政策和决策者吸取教训和启示。本文有助于理解光伏产业的多面性及其障碍。该方法使公共卫生决策者能够更好地理解对他人影响最大的驱动型光伏壁垒与受他人影响最大的依赖型光伏壁垒。此外,在新兴经济体中,患者和护理人员的知识、态度和做法也可能成为光伏发电的关键障碍。这些信息可以帮助公共卫生政策制定者、政府实体和卫生/光伏从业者确定他们应该优先改进的光伏障碍,以及如何管理这些障碍之间的权衡。社会影响与发达经济体相比,新兴经济体的特殊目的载体壁垒具有本质上的不同,需要在其具体背景下加以审查。分层ISM模型表明,新兴经济体政府的资源和监管举措会通过知情/激活的药品供应链参与者,最终推动其民众对光伏特定知识、态度和实践结果的改进。原创性/价值本文强调了ISM方法作为卫生政策决策支持工具的部署,在新兴经济体中,根据其上下文关系,识别和排名有效光伏系统的障碍,以更好地理解这些相互关系如何影响国家光伏系统的结果。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Pharmacovigilance in emerging economies: modeling interaction among barriers
PurposeThe main purpose of this paper is to identify and rank various barriers to pharmacovigilance (PV) in context of emerging economies and examine their interrelationships using the interpretive structural modeling (ISM) approach. The result is a model that offers insights about how to achieve rational and safe use of medicines and ensure patient safety as realized through robust national PV systems.Design/methodology/approachThe paper develops a model to analyze the interactions among PV barriers using the ISM approach. Based on input from clinical and medical product development experts, PV barriers in emerging economies were identified and reviewed. The hierarchical interrelationships among these PV barriers were analyzed in context of their driving/dependence powers.FindingsFindings of the study identify key PV barriers—lack of resources/infrastructure, weak legislation, unfair burden of disease, lack of PV capacity, training, and enforcement authority—that drive, or strongly influence, other barriers and thwart implementation of robust national PV systems in emerging economies. Pharmaceutical industry factors were PV barriers that were identified as autonomous, implying their relative disconnection from other barriers, and patient PV practices barrier was strongly dependent on other barriers.Research limitations/implicationsThe paper offers policy- and decision-makers alike with a framework to support further research into interdependencies among key PV barriers in emerging economies. It can serve as an impetus for further research with potential to broadening the understanding of how and why PV systems may be rendered ineffective. Future studies can be planned to apply the ISM approach to study PV barriers in the context of developed economies and draw lessons and implications for policy- and decision-makers by contrasting results from these studies.Practical implicationsThis paper contributes to the understanding of the multifaceted nature of PV and its barriers. The proposed approach gives public health decision-makers a better comprehension of driver PV barriers that have most influence on others versus dependent PV barriers, which are most influenced by others. Also, knowledge, attitude and practices of patients and caregivers can also be critical PV barriers in emerging economies. This information can be instrumental for public health policymakers, government entities, and health/PV practitioners to identify the PV barriers that they should prioritize for improvement and how to manage trade-offs between these barriers.Social implicationsPV barriers in emerging economies, as compared to developed economies, are inherently different and need to be examined in their specific context. The hierarchical ISM model suggests that resources and regulation initiatives by governments in emerging economies lead to through informed/enabled pharmaceutical supply chain players and eventually drive PV-specific knowledge, attitude, and practice outcomes improvements across their populace.Originality/valueThis paper highlights the deployment of ISM approach as a health policy decision support tool in the identifying and ranking barriers to effective PV systems in emerging economies, in terms of their contextual relationships, to achieve a better understanding as to how these interrelationships can affect national PV system outcomes.
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CiteScore
6.50
自引率
3.20%
发文量
30
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