| Literature DB >> 21559326 |
Mark van Ommeren1, Corrado Barbui, Kaz de Jong, Tarun Dua, Lynne Jones, Pau Perez-Sales, Marian Schilperoord, Peter Ventevogel, M Taghi Yasamy, Shekhar Saxena.
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Year: 2011 PMID: 21559326 PMCID: PMC3086873 DOI: 10.1371/journal.pmed.1001030
Source DB: PubMed Journal: PLoS Med ISSN: 1549-1277 Impact factor: 11.069
Psychotropics in the next edition of the Interagency Emergency Health Kit [1].
| Type of Product | Variety Available in the Kit within Each Type of Product |
| Medicines | |
| Anaesthetics | 2 |
| Analgesics | 4 |
| Antiallergics | 3 |
| Antidotes | 2 |
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| Anti-infective medicines | 11 |
| Malaria module | 5 |
| Medicines affecting the blood | 2 |
| Cardiovascular medicines | 3 |
| Dermatological medicines | 6 |
| Disinfectants and antiseptics | 2 |
| Diuretics | 2 |
| Gastrointestinal medicines | 3 |
| Oxytocics | 2 |
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| Respiratory tract, medicines acting on | 2 |
| Solutions correcting water, electrolyte and acid-base disturbances | 5 |
| Vitamins | 2 |
| PEP module | 9 |
| Clinical guidelines | 3 |
| Medical devices, renewable | 48 |
| Medical devices, equipment | 36 |
| Stationary | 6 |
The three anti-convulsants are phenobarbital (1,000 50-mg tablets), diazepam (200 injections, 5 mg/ml; 2 ml/ampoule), and magnesium sulfate (40 injections; 500 mg/ml; 10 ml/ampoule).
The five psychotherapeutic medicines are amitriptyline (4,000 25-mg tablets); biperiden (400 2-mg tablets), diazepam (240 5-mg tablets), haloperidol (1,300 5-mg tablets), and haloperidol (20 injections; 5 mg/ml; 1 ml/ampoule).
Figure 1Cyclone Nargis response 2008: Interagency Emergency Health Kits en route to Myanmar.
Photo credit: Fred Urlep, WHO.
The WHO Model List of Essential Medicines and the Interagency Emergency Health Kit (IEHK).
| Inclusion in the WHO Model List of Essential Medicines | Inclusion in the Next Edition of the Interagency Emergency Health Kit | |
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| Chlorpromazine | Injection: 25 mg (hydrochloride)/ml in 2 ml ampoule; oral liquid: 25 mg (hydrochloride)/5 ml; tablet: 100 mg (hydrochloride) | No |
| Fluphenazine | Injection: 25 mg (decanoateac or enantate) in 1 ml ampoule | No |
| Haloperidol | Injection: 5 mg in 1 ml ampoule; tablet: 2 mg; 5 mg | Yes (5 mg in 1-ml ampoule injection and 5-mg tablets) |
| Amitriptyline | Tablet: 25 mg (hydrochloride). | Yes |
| Fluoxetine | Solid oral dosage form: 20 mg (present as hydrochloride) | No |
| Carbamazepine | Tablet (scored): 100 mg; 200 mg | No |
| Lithium carbonate | Solid oral dosage form: 300 mg | No |
| Valproic acid | Tablet (enteric coated): 2000 mg; 500 mg (sodium valproate) | No |
| Diazepam | Tablet (scored): 2 mg; 5 mg | Yes (5-mg tablets) |
| Clomipramine | Capsule: 10 mg; 25 mg (hydrochloride) | No |
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| Biperiden | Injection: 5 mg (lactate) in 1 ml ampoule; tablet: 2 mg (hydrochloride) | Yes (2-mg tablets) |
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| Carbamazepine | Oral liquid: 100 mg/5 ml; tablet (chewable): 100 mg; 200 mg; tablet (scored): 100 mg; 200 mg | No |
| Diazepam | Gel or rectal solution: 5 mg/ml in 0.5-ml, 2-ml, and 4-ml tubes | Yes (5 mg/ml in 2-ml tube) |
| Lorazepam | Parenteral formulation: 2 mg/ml in 1 ml ampoule; 4 mg/ml in 1 ml ampoule | No |
| Phenobarbital | Injection: 200 mg/ml (phenobarbital sodium); oral liquid: 15 mg/5 ml (as phenobarbital or phenobarbital sodium); tablet: 15–100 mg (phenobarbital) | Yes (50-mg tablets) |
| Phenotyn | Capsule: 25 mg; 50 mg; 100 mg (sodium salt); injection: 50 mg/ml in 5-ml vial (sodium salt); oral liquid: 25–30 mg/5 ml; tablet: 25 mg; 50 mg; 100 mg (sodium salt); tablet (chewable): 50 mg | No |
| Valproic acid | Oral liquid: 200 mg/5 ml; tablet (crushable): 100 mg; tablet (enteric coated): 200 mg; 500 mg (sodium valproate) | No |
Indicates that the medicine represents a pharmacological class (similar clinical performance).
Advantages and disadvantages of including fluoxetine versus amitriptyline in the Interagency Emergency Health Kit (IEHK).
| Advantages | Disadvantages | |
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| 1. Generally safer | 1. Can increase anxiety, which already is common in emergencies |
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| 1. Most available anti-depressant in low-income countries | 1. More difficult to prescribe: medical examination is important to avoid rare but serious side effects (cardiac events) |