Safer medicine

Published: 12 December 2008 y., Friday

Vaistai
The commission has tabled proposals to improve how the European pharmaceutical market operates and ensure that patients benefit from safe, innovative and accessible medicines.

One proposal would allow the industry to post non-promotional product information on the internet or in health-related publications. Consumers could then access the information to find out about the composition, uses and effects of different drugs on the market. At present, not all Europeans have access to such information, partly because standards differ from country to country.

Europeans should be informed about available medicines and treatments “since their health is at stake,” said vice-president Günter Verheugen, commissioner for enterprise and industry.

National authorities would monitor the information to ensure it does not violate the European ban on advertising prescription medicine. The ban is intended to prevent the inappropriate consumption of medicine and help contain drug costs.

Other measures – including mandatory safety features like serial codes and seals on packages – seek to protect consumers against counterfeit medicine and unsafe drugs. Counterfeit medicine is a problem throughout the world. Anyone almost anywhere can come across medicine packaged to look legitimate but which does not contain the correct ingredients or – worse – may be filled with toxic substances.

Unfortunately, counterfeit drugs are big business, with sales expected to reach €58bn globally in 2010 (more than 90% up on 2005). To stamp out these practices, the new proposals would require drug manufacturers to audit the firms that make the active ingredients in their products. Purchasers too would have to audit wholesale distributors.

With reactions to medicine causing nearly 200 000 deaths in the EU every year, the plan also contains proposals to strengthen and clarify the EU system for monitoring the safety of medicine.

The plan also calls for talks among EU countries about how to make decisions on pricing and reimbursement more transparent and how to boost pharmaceutical research. It recommends more cooperation on safety with the US, Japan and Canada.

 

Šaltinis: ec.europa.eu
Copying, publishing, announcing any information from the News.lt portal without written permission of News.lt editorial office is prohibited.

Facebook Comments

New comment


Captcha

Associated articles

The most popular articles

Behind the Six Degrees of SARS

The concept that each person on the planet is just six handshakes removed from every other person has frightening implications more »

WHO to Launch Special Anti-SARS Fund

The World Health Organization, WHO, says it is starting a special fund to combat SARS, primarily in mainland China and Hong Kong more »

Europe to step up Sars checks

European countries are to step up checks on air passengers arriving from countries affected by the Sars virus more »

The Measures Against SARS

Kazakh Prime Minister during a government session on 29 April ordered that a special program of urgent measures be drawn up to prevent the spread of severe acute respiratory syndrome more »

Want to live 100 years?

The secret to a long life more »

A taste of ‘Big Brother’ in England school

Fear of SARS led to the headmistress of Harrogate Ladies’ College yesterday locking herself in a boarding house with 43 of her pupils more »

Doctors log on to fight SARS outbreak

Some of the starkest early reports about the deadly SARS pneumonia came not from health authorities, but from Internet discussions in which emergency-room physicians swapped details about the start of the epidemic more »

China raises death toll from illness

Officials say 53 now have died; WHO experts study possible animal link to mystery disease more »

New Space Station

The construction of the Yuri Gagarin Space Station would require 3-3.5 years more »

Taiwan experts on visit to SARS-affected mainland areas: DOH

Three Taiwan public health experts have traveled to mainland China to join their counterparts from other countries in surveying the outbreak of severe acute respiratory syndrome (SARS) there more »