Pharmacovigilance Program: Malaysia Versus Nigeria, An Update
Spontaneous reporting and intensive monitoring are the conventional systems used for detecting, recording and reporting adverse drug reactions. Using spontaneous reporting a lot of successes was made as existing adverse drug reactions were identified and new ones were prevented. In general, regulato...
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my-unisza-ir.73992022-09-13T05:25:08Z http://eprints.unisza.edu.my/7399/ Pharmacovigilance Program: Malaysia Versus Nigeria, An Update Mainul, Haque Abdullahi Rabiu, Abubakar R Medicine (General) Spontaneous reporting and intensive monitoring are the conventional systems used for detecting, recording and reporting adverse drug reactions. Using spontaneous reporting a lot of successes was made as existing adverse drug reactions were identified and new ones were prevented. In general, regulatory authorities consider only the information and outcome of the premarketing clinical trial in controlled settings to approve and register a drug for human use. As such, not much is known about the drug beyond the data obtained from clinical trials in controlled settings. The outcome of pre-marketing studies for safety, efficacy, and quality of new medicines will not represent the whole population of patients that will use the drugs when they are approved. Henceforth, suitable and constant post-marketing surveillance (PMS) is indispensable. The two types of post-marketing studies are descriptive and analytical. Descriptive study is carried out to generate adverse drug reaction signals (hypotheses) while the analytical study is done to test hypotheses and determine associations or causal relations between observed effects and particular drugs. Examples of descriptive studies are spontaneous reporting and intensive monitoring while analytical studies include case-control studies, cohort studies, and post-marketing clinical trials. The aim of this review is to highlight the menace of adverse drug reactions, challenges of the spontaneous reporting system and, more importantly, the information available from Malaysia and Nigeria. Association of Indian Pharmacist 2016 Article PeerReviewed text en http://eprints.unisza.edu.my/7399/1/FH02-FP-16-06001.pdf image en http://eprints.unisza.edu.my/7399/2/FH02-FP-17-09666.jpg Mainul, Haque and Abdullahi Rabiu, Abubakar (2016) Pharmacovigilance Program: Malaysia Versus Nigeria, An Update. International Journal of Pharmaceutical Research, 8 (1). pp. 8-12. ISSN 0975-2366 |
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R Medicine (General) Mainul, Haque Abdullahi Rabiu, Abubakar Pharmacovigilance Program: Malaysia Versus Nigeria, An Update |
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Spontaneous reporting and intensive monitoring are the conventional systems used for detecting, recording and reporting adverse drug reactions. Using spontaneous reporting a lot of successes was made as existing adverse drug reactions were identified and new ones were prevented. In general, regulatory authorities consider only the information and outcome of the premarketing clinical trial in controlled settings to approve and register a drug for human use. As such, not much is known about the drug beyond the data obtained from clinical trials in controlled settings. The outcome of pre-marketing studies for safety, efficacy, and quality of new medicines will not represent the whole population of patients that will use the drugs when they are approved. Henceforth, suitable and constant post-marketing surveillance (PMS) is indispensable. The two types of post-marketing studies are descriptive and analytical. Descriptive study is carried out to generate adverse drug reaction signals (hypotheses) while the analytical study is done to test hypotheses and determine associations or causal relations between observed effects and particular drugs. Examples of descriptive studies are spontaneous reporting and intensive monitoring while analytical studies include case-control studies, cohort studies, and post-marketing clinical trials. The aim of this review is to highlight the menace of adverse drug reactions, challenges of the spontaneous reporting system and, more importantly, the information available from Malaysia and Nigeria. |
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Article |
author |
Mainul, Haque Abdullahi Rabiu, Abubakar |
author_facet |
Mainul, Haque Abdullahi Rabiu, Abubakar |
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Mainul, Haque |
title |
Pharmacovigilance Program: Malaysia Versus Nigeria, An Update |
title_short |
Pharmacovigilance Program: Malaysia Versus Nigeria, An Update |
title_full |
Pharmacovigilance Program: Malaysia Versus Nigeria, An Update |
title_fullStr |
Pharmacovigilance Program: Malaysia Versus Nigeria, An Update |
title_full_unstemmed |
Pharmacovigilance Program: Malaysia Versus Nigeria, An Update |
title_sort |
pharmacovigilance program: malaysia versus nigeria, an update |
publisher |
Association of Indian Pharmacist |
publishDate |
2016 |
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http://eprints.unisza.edu.my/7399/1/FH02-FP-16-06001.pdf http://eprints.unisza.edu.my/7399/2/FH02-FP-17-09666.jpg http://eprints.unisza.edu.my/7399/ |
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