The
Head of Safety Monitoring Department of the Food and Drugs Authority
(FDA), Mr. George Sabblah, has highlighted the need for a stronger
Pharmacovigilance system in the country.
He explained that an
effective post approval safety monitoring of drugs would help reduce
adverse drug reaction and also achieve the best clinical outcome for
patients.
This, he said, was needed especially when new vaccines
and antibiotics were being introduced coupled with infiltration of
counterfeits and substandard drugs.
Pharmacovigilance is the
science and activities relating to the detection, assessment,
understanding and prevention of adverse effects or any other drug
related problem.
Mr. Sabblah was delivering a presentation on
“Pharmacovigilance and the need for Safety Monitoring of Medicines” at a
Pharmacovigilance Assessment Tool (PAT) Training of Trainees Workshop
in Cape Coast on Tuesday.
PAT is a set of monitoring guidelines
on adverse drug reaction that was jointly formulated by the FDA and GHS
and had already been piloted in Accra, later to be replicated across the
country.
The two-day workshop, organised by the FDA in
collaboration with the Ghana Health Service (GHS) is being attended by
participants, made up of health managers from the Central, Western,
Volta, Greater Accra and Eastern Regional Health Directorates.
It aims at introducing participants to the PAT, discuss the general
pharmacovigilance and importance of adverse drug reaction reporting,
challenges of Pharmacovigilance at the regional levels and the way
forward.
Explaining the importance of Pharmacovigilance further,
Mr. Sabblah stated that pre-clinical and clinical studies on drugs
lacked sufficient evidence for safety since size, duration, and
population, among others for such studies were limited.
He
pointed out that effective Pharmacovigilance would help prevent
unnecessary harm, reduce healthcare cost such as hospital admission due
to adverse effect and ensure public confidence in medicines.
“Drugs are good weapons of fighting diseases but can destroy humanity”,
he cautioned, and urged all health professionals to report adverse drug
reaction they encounter to help build a better pharmacovigilance.
Explaining the PAT, Mrs. Ruby Awittor, a Pharmacist with the GHS, said
it had features such as peer review and monitoring and evaluation, and
reiterated the need for all health professionals to strengthen the
pharmacovigilance system in the country to help improve healthcare
delivery.
Mr. Kingsley Nsiah-Poku, Central Regional Director of
FDA, urged the public to be extra-vigilant when purchasing drugs since
there were some counterfeits in the system and stressed the need for the
public to seek the assistance of the Authority in the safe disposal of
expired drugs. |
|
|
|
|
No comments:
Post a Comment