Literature DB >> 20935418

Providing safe medicines for children in Nigeria: The impediments and remedies.

K A Oshikoya1, I O Senbanjo.   

Abstract

Promoting safety of medicines for children is a global concern which has prompted the World Health Organization (WHO) to launch a campaign of "Making Medicines Child Size". Children in Nigeria were once victims of unethical clinical medicine trials and repeated victims of use of fake and adulterated medicines. Considering the magnitude of harms children had suffered in Nigeria from the use of medicines, there is a need for literature review to identify the factors preventing children from accessing safe medicines and to suggest remedies to the problems. Lack of access to up- to- date medicine information, lack of training and research in pediatric clinical pharmacology, deficiencies in undergraduate and postgraduate teaching of medicine risk management and clinical pharmacology and therapeutics, irrational medicine use due to lack of pediatric focus on essential medicine list and inappropriate home storage of medicines by parents, lack of evidence- based medicine (EBM) practice, lack of national adverse drug reaction surveillance among children, and weak national drug policies were the major problems identified. It is to be hoped that development and provision of a pediatric national drug formulary for health professionals in Nigeria, creating a comprehensive national pediatric drug research network in collaborations with developed countries, reviewing the undergraduate and postgraduate curriculum in pediatrics to include teaching of basic elements of rational prescribing, drug dose calculations, adverse drug reactions and pharmacovigilance, increasing access to essential medicines for children, postgraduate teaching of EBM, and strengthening of the national drug policies would improve children's access to safe medicines in Nigeria.

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Year:  2010        PMID: 20935418     DOI: 10.4103/1596-3519.70954

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Ann Afr Med        ISSN: 0975-5764


  6 in total

Review 1.  The Current States, Challenges, Ongoing Efforts, and Future Perspectives of Pharmaceutical Excipients in Pediatric Patients in Each Country and Region.

Authors:  Jumpei Saito; Anjali Agrawal; Vandana Patravale; Anjali Pandya; Samuel Orubu; Min Zhao; Gavin P Andrews; Caroline Petit-Turcotte; Hannah Landry; Alysha Croker; Hidefumi Nakamura; Akimasa Yamatani; Smita Salunke
Journal:  Children (Basel)       Date:  2022-03-23

2.  Priority medicines for maternal and child health: a global survey of national essential medicines lists.

Authors:  Suzanne Hill; Annie Yang; Lisa Bero
Journal:  PLoS One       Date:  2012-05-31       Impact factor: 3.240

3.  The "child size medicines" concept: policy provisions in Uganda.

Authors:  Jasper Ogwal-Okeng; Anthony Mbonye; Freddie Ssengooba; Rebecca Nantanda; Herbert Muyinda; Ebba Holme Hansen; Xavier Nsabagasani
Journal:  J Pharm Policy Pract       Date:  2015-01-31

4.  An evaluation of the prescribing patterns for under-five patients at a Tertiary Paediatric Hospital in Sierra Leone.

Authors:  Christine Princess Cole; Peter Bai James; Alusine Tommy Kargbo
Journal:  J Basic Clin Pharm       Date:  2015-09

Review 5.  Carers' Medication Administration Errors in the Domiciliary Setting: A Systematic Review.

Authors:  Anam Parand; Sara Garfield; Charles Vincent; Bryony Dean Franklin
Journal:  PLoS One       Date:  2016-12-01       Impact factor: 3.240

6.  Evaluation of antibiotic prescriptions and use in under-five children in Ibadan, SouthWestern Nigeria.

Authors:  Rasaq Adisa; Ochuko M Orherhe; Titilayo O Fakeye
Journal:  Afr Health Sci       Date:  2018-12       Impact factor: 0.927

  6 in total

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