Medicines and the New Economic Environment
(1998; 252 pages) [Spanish]
Table of Contents
View the documentTHE AUTHORS
View the documentPREFACE
View the documentINTRODUCTION
Open this folder and view contentsI. THE GLOBAL ECONOMIC ENVIRONMENT
Close this folderII. THE REFORM OF HEALTH CARE SYSTEMS
Open this folder and view contentsII. 1. Cost Containment and Health care Reforms: the Impact on Pharmaceuticals
Open this folder and view contentsII.2. Reform of Health Care Services in Developing Countries, Role of the State and Essential Drugs
Close this folderII.3. Regulation, Policies and Essential Drugs
Open this folder and view contents1. TWO MAJOR TRENDS
Close this folder2. DRUGS
Open this folder and view contents2.1. The process of innovation
Close this folder2.2. The selection process
View the document2.2.1. Prevailing health criteria
View the document2.2.2. Regulatory approval: selecting the useful and safe
View the document2.2.3. Essential drugs: the best
View the document2.2.4. And what about quality?
Open this folder and view contents2.3. The expansion of markets
Open this folder and view contents2.4. The creation of common areas: harmonization
Open this folder and view contents2.5. Ongoing processes
View the document3. CONCLUSIONS
Open this folder and view contentsIII. A CHANGING PHARMACEUTICAL INDUSTRY
Open this folder and view contentsIV. SYNTHESIS AND FORECASTS
View the documentBIBLIOTECA CIVITAS ECONOMÍA Y EMPRESA
View the documentBACK COVER
 
2.2.2. Regulatory approval: selecting the useful and safe

It has been stated above that the commitment of the State in the field of drugs relates closely to how «obscure» the product is to the consumer. Neither the patient nor the prescriber himself have all the information required to make a rational and sufficiently judicious decision when they demand medicines. The evaluation of both the actual and total impact of any drug is too complex a process, even considering individual clinical observations. It is necessary to have available a set of qualified human, technical and financial resources to be in a position to develop an adequate pre-marketing evaluation (prior to the drug being used on a «massive» scale) and an adequate critical post-marketing follow-up (through drug surveillance programs). Since they are all highly hazardous products, society cannot take the risk of using them without such prior evaluation. This is the purpose of the regulatory approval or marketing authorization.

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Last updated: May 3, 2013