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Drug Safety Monitoring in Health Programs of Cameroon

BACKGROUND: Data are needed to serve as evidence in planning the strengthening of pharmacovigilance in health programs administering drugs to populations. The present study was proposed to map the distribution of pharmacovigilance units in health programs, assess the availability of key resources, t...

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Autores principales: Tchio-Nighie, Ketina Hirma, Mpoh, Maurice Mbwe, Tchokomeni, Herve, Koutio Douanla, Ingrid Marcelle, Ntsekendio, Paul Nyibio, Dieumo, Frank Forex Kiadjieu, Ateudjieu, Jerome
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: 2022
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7614915/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/37559896
http://dx.doi.org/10.35248/2329-6887.22.10.385
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author Tchio-Nighie, Ketina Hirma
Mpoh, Maurice Mbwe
Tchokomeni, Herve
Koutio Douanla, Ingrid Marcelle
Ntsekendio, Paul Nyibio
Dieumo, Frank Forex Kiadjieu
Ateudjieu, Jerome
author_facet Tchio-Nighie, Ketina Hirma
Mpoh, Maurice Mbwe
Tchokomeni, Herve
Koutio Douanla, Ingrid Marcelle
Ntsekendio, Paul Nyibio
Dieumo, Frank Forex Kiadjieu
Ateudjieu, Jerome
author_sort Tchio-Nighie, Ketina Hirma
collection PubMed
description BACKGROUND: Data are needed to serve as evidence in planning the strengthening of pharmacovigilance in health programs administering drugs to populations. The present study was proposed to map the distribution of pharmacovigilance units in health programs, assess the availability of key resources, the implementation of key pharmacovigilance activities and identify needs of involved actors. METHODS: It was a cross sectional descriptive study targeting all health programs of the Cameroon Ministry of Public Health administering drugs/vaccines to the population. Data were collected using semi structured questionnaire administered face to face to key persons in charge of drug safety monitoring or drug management in health programs. RESULTS: Out of the 09 health programs involved in drug distribution, 07 consented to participate. Five out of them (71.4%) claimed to have existing pharmacovigilance units. Office space, computers, operating budget, data analysis software and a trained staff were available in 28.6%, 42.9%, 42.9%, 14.3%, 00.0%, and 42.9% of the health programs respectively. One of the 7 health programs (14.3%) declared conducting detection/notification of adverse events following exposure drugs, 2 (28.6%) conduct causality assessment and 3 (42.8%) conduct analysis of pharmacovigilance data. All health programs proposed to prioritize the allocation of budget and qualified personnel and the training of existing personnel as key interventions to improve drugs/vaccines safety monitoring in health programs. CONCLUSION: The study reports limited coverage of Cameroon health programs with activities leading to drugs and vaccine safety monitoring. Suggested actions have to be taken into account when attempting to improve the situation.
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spelling pubmed-76149152023-08-09 Drug Safety Monitoring in Health Programs of Cameroon Tchio-Nighie, Ketina Hirma Mpoh, Maurice Mbwe Tchokomeni, Herve Koutio Douanla, Ingrid Marcelle Ntsekendio, Paul Nyibio Dieumo, Frank Forex Kiadjieu Ateudjieu, Jerome J Pharmacovigil Article BACKGROUND: Data are needed to serve as evidence in planning the strengthening of pharmacovigilance in health programs administering drugs to populations. The present study was proposed to map the distribution of pharmacovigilance units in health programs, assess the availability of key resources, the implementation of key pharmacovigilance activities and identify needs of involved actors. METHODS: It was a cross sectional descriptive study targeting all health programs of the Cameroon Ministry of Public Health administering drugs/vaccines to the population. Data were collected using semi structured questionnaire administered face to face to key persons in charge of drug safety monitoring or drug management in health programs. RESULTS: Out of the 09 health programs involved in drug distribution, 07 consented to participate. Five out of them (71.4%) claimed to have existing pharmacovigilance units. Office space, computers, operating budget, data analysis software and a trained staff were available in 28.6%, 42.9%, 42.9%, 14.3%, 00.0%, and 42.9% of the health programs respectively. One of the 7 health programs (14.3%) declared conducting detection/notification of adverse events following exposure drugs, 2 (28.6%) conduct causality assessment and 3 (42.8%) conduct analysis of pharmacovigilance data. All health programs proposed to prioritize the allocation of budget and qualified personnel and the training of existing personnel as key interventions to improve drugs/vaccines safety monitoring in health programs. CONCLUSION: The study reports limited coverage of Cameroon health programs with activities leading to drugs and vaccine safety monitoring. Suggested actions have to be taken into account when attempting to improve the situation. 2022-10-17 /pmc/articles/PMC7614915/ /pubmed/37559896 http://dx.doi.org/10.35248/2329-6887.22.10.385 Text en https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are credited. (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/)
spellingShingle Article
Tchio-Nighie, Ketina Hirma
Mpoh, Maurice Mbwe
Tchokomeni, Herve
Koutio Douanla, Ingrid Marcelle
Ntsekendio, Paul Nyibio
Dieumo, Frank Forex Kiadjieu
Ateudjieu, Jerome
Drug Safety Monitoring in Health Programs of Cameroon
title Drug Safety Monitoring in Health Programs of Cameroon
title_full Drug Safety Monitoring in Health Programs of Cameroon
title_fullStr Drug Safety Monitoring in Health Programs of Cameroon
title_full_unstemmed Drug Safety Monitoring in Health Programs of Cameroon
title_short Drug Safety Monitoring in Health Programs of Cameroon
title_sort drug safety monitoring in health programs of cameroon
topic Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7614915/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/37559896
http://dx.doi.org/10.35248/2329-6887.22.10.385
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