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- Title
Past, Present and Future of Pharmacovigilance in India.
- Authors
Kumar, A.
- Abstract
While major advancements in the discipline of pharmacovigilance have taken place in the West, not much has been achieved in India. However, with more clinical trials and clinical research activity being conducted in India, there is an immense need to understand and implement pharmacovigilance. Pharmacovigilance is the pharmacological science relating to the detection, assessment, understanding and prevention of adverse effects, particularly long-term and shortterm adverse effects of medicines. As a means of pooling existing data on adverse drug reactions (ADRs), the World Health Organization (WHO) Programme for International Drug Monitoring was started in 1968. Currently, 86 countries participate in the programme, which is coordinated by WHO together with its collaborating centre in Uppsala, Sweden. The origin of pharmacovigilance in India goes back to 1986, when a formal ADR monitoring system consisting of 12 regional centers, each covering a population of 50 million, was proposed for India. The National Pharmacovigilance Program established in January 2005, was to be overseen by the National Pharmacovigilance Advisory Committee based in the Central Drugs Standard Control Organization (CDSCO), New Delhi. This article gives a systematic review of the pharmacovigilance in India from its origin to the current scenario and also discusses the various strategies and proposals to build, maintain and implement a robust pharmacovigilance system for India in the coming years.
- Subjects
NEW Delhi (India); INDIA; DRUG side effects; SYSTEMATIC reviews; DRUG withdrawal symptoms; CENTRAL Drugs Standard Control Organization; WORLD Health Organization
- Publication
Systematic Reviews in Pharmacy, 2011, Vol 2, Issue 1, p55
- ISSN
0975-8453
- Publication type
Article
- DOI
10.4103/0975-8453.83440