New Delhi: Indian Pharmacopoeia Commission (IPC) is set to become the first WHO Collaborating Centre for safety of medicines and vaccines in the south-east Asia, Union Health Minister J P Nadda said here on Wednesday.
Nadda said that drug safety related issues pose a major challenge for healthcare professionals, regulators and pharmaceuticals industry and this is where Pharmacovigilance, the monitoring of adverse effects of drugs, plays a significant role in ensuring quality and efficacy of medical products.
He was addressing the 38th Annual Meeting of Representatives of the National Pharmacovigilance Centres participating in the WHO Programme for International Drug Monitoring, jointly organised by IPC and WHO. With the changes in the way people take medicines, Nadda underlined the importance of pharmacovigilance saying that India has made considerable progress in the field in the last five years.
“Considerable progress has been made by the India Pharmacovigilance Programme over the last few years, including setting up of pharmacovigilance system in tuberculosis and HIV-AIDS related public health programmes,” he said, after inaugurating the 38th annual meeting of National Pharmacovigilance Centres. Launched in 2010, the pharmacovigilance programme has set up 179 centres across the county.
Adverse drug reactions are reported to Indian Pharmacopoeia Commission, which works in collaboration with global Adverse Drug Reaction Monitoring Centre, Sweden to contribute to the global Adverse Drug Reactions data base, Nadda said. Health Secretary BP Sharma said the importance of Pharmacovigilance has increased as there have been changes in the ways people take medicines.
“People prescribe medicines from across the border through internet and all kinds of medicines are coming for which we are not sure whether they are fully tested. They might be coming from places which may not be having a strong regulatory system. People are also taking self-medication, then there also counterfeit and substandard medication also. In such situation the need for a pharmacovigilance system is very important,” Sharma said.
Aim of the meeting was to provide a platform to representatives of Pharmacovigilance Centres from around the world to meet and discuss on co-vigilance and drug safety issues.
At the conclusion of the meeting, the representatives will give recommendation to WHO on how to address the problems of co-vigilance and patient safety globally.
IPC is created to set standards of drugs in the country. Its basic function is to update regularly the standards of drugs commonly required for treatment of diseases prevailing in this region. It publishes official documents for improving Quality of Medicines by way of adding new and updating existing monographs in the form of Indian Pharmacopoeia (IP). (PTI)