| Literature DB >> 25905889 |
Ronald Kiguba1, Charles Karamagi2, Paul Waako1, Helen B Ndagije3, Sheila M Bird4.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Lack of adequate detail compromises analysis of reported suspected adverse drug reactions (ADRs). We investigated how comprehensively Ugandan healthcare professionals (HCPs) described their most recent previous-month suspected ADR, and determined the characteristics of HCPs who provided comprehensive ADR descriptions. We also identified rare, serious, and unanticipated suspected ADR descriptions with medication safety-alerting potential.Entities:
Mesh:
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Year: 2015 PMID: 25905889 PMCID: PMC4408100 DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0123974
Source DB: PubMed Journal: PLoS One ISSN: 1932-6203 Impact factor: 3.240
Survey-description of the most recent past-month suspected ADR provided by 241 out of 268 HCPs who suspected ADRs in the previous month, Uganda, 2013.
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| Skin only | 88 | 37% | 43% |
| Central Nervous System (CNS) only | 20 | 8% | 10% |
| Gastrointestinal Tract (GI) only | 18 | 7% | 9% |
| Skin & CNS | 6 | 3% | 2% |
| Skin & GI | 4 | 2% | 2% |
| CNS & GI | 4 | 2% | 2% |
| Other | 66 | 27% | 32% |
| Not reported | 35 | 14% | - |
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| Antibacterials only | 70 | 29% | 34% |
| Antiretrovirals only | 45 | 19% | 22% |
| Antimalarials only | 28 | 12% | 14% |
| Antibacterials & Antiretrovirals | 1 | 0% | 1% |
| Antibacterials & Antimalarials | 4 | 1% | 2% |
| Other | 55 | 23% | 27% |
| Not reported | 38 | 16% | - |
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| Oral or Topical | 83 | 34% | 65% |
| Injectable | 44 | 18% | 35% |
| Not reported | 114 | 47% | - |
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| Measure of central tendency | 28.3 (16.5) | 28 (20–36) | |
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| Mild | 27 | 11% | 21% |
| Moderate | 42 | 17% | 33% |
| Severe | 59 | 24% | 46% |
| Not reported | 113 | 47% | - |
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*Route of administration could be inferred for a further 63 (6 were by injection & 59 were oral) ADR descriptions.
Comprehensiveness of ADR-description of the most recent past-month suspected ADR(s) as reported by 241 out of 268 HCPs who suspected ADRs in the previous month, Uganda, 2013.
| HIGHER-LEVEL DETAILS in addition to ADR | Body Site | Drug Class | Route | Age of patient | Severity | Observed number | Expected by independence |
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| 206/268 | 203/268 | 127/268 | 133/268 | 128/268 | |||
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| Combination 1 |
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| 22 | 19 | |
| Combination 2 |
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| Combination 3 |
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| 19 | 20 | |
| Combination 4 |
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| 2 | 6 | |
| Combination 5 |
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| 17 | 18 | |
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Personal and professional factors associated with comprehensive ADR description of most recent past-month suspected ADR for 241 healthcare professionals who suspected ADR(s) in the previous month and provided a description, Uganda, 2013.
| Factor | Comprehensive ADR Description | Crude Analysis | Adjusted Analysis | |||||
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| Yes (%) | No (%) | OR | 95%CI | P-value | OR | 95%CI | P-value | |
| Level of Health Facility | ||||||||
| Other | 37 (56) | 29 (44) | 1.0 | 1.0 | ||||
| Hospital | 87 (50) | 88 (50) | 0.8 | 0.44–1.37 | 0.380 | 2.0 | 0.86–4.47 | 0.110 |
| Type of Health Facility | ||||||||
| Public | 49 (41) | 71 (59) | 1.0 | 1.0 | ||||
| Private Not-For-Profit | 31 (67) | 15 (33) | 3.0 | 1.46–6.13 | 0.003 | 3.4 | 1.48–7.82 | 0.004 |
| Private For-Profit | 44 (59) | 31 (41) | 2.1 | 1.14–3.70 | 0.016 | 2.6 | 1.13–5.96 | 0.024 |
| Region of the country | ||||||||
| Central | 49 (37) | 82 (63) | 1.0 | 1.0 | ||||
| Eastern | 34 (62) | 21 (38) | 2.7 | 1.42–5.18 | 0.003 | 2.6 | 1.20–5.73 | 0.015 |
| Other | 41 (75) | 14 (25) | 4.9 | 2.43–9.89 | <0.001 | 6.4 | 2.85–14.37 | <0.001 |
| Professional Cadre | ||||||||
| Nurse | 54 (57) | 41 (43) | 1.0 | 1.0 | ||||
| Non-nurse | 70 (48) | 76 (52) | 0.7 | 0.42–1.18 | 0.178 | 1.1 | 0.54–2.32 | 0.769 |
| Age | ||||||||
| Less than 30 years | 53 (50) | 54 (50) | 1.0 | 1.0 | ||||
| Aged 30 years or older | 71 (53) | 63 (47) | 1.1 | 0.69–1.91 | 0.594 | 1.7 | 0.92–3.09 | 0.090 |
| Patient Load | ||||||||
| Greater than 30/day | 59 (50) | 58 (50) | 1.0 | 1.0 | ||||
| At most 30/day | 65 (52) | 59 (48) | 1.1 | 0.65–1.80 | 0.757 | 1.4 | 0.78–2.66 | 0.241 |
| Department | ||||||||
| Medicine | 70 (52) | 64 (48) | 1.0 | 1.0 | ||||
| Surgery | 4 (31) | 9 (69) | 0.4 | 0.12–1.38 | 0.150 | 0.4 | 0.09–1.47 | 0.156 |
| Paediatrics, OBS & Gyn | 16 (43) | 21 (57) | 0.7 | 0.33–1.45 | 0.334 | 0.7 | 0.29–1.64 | 0.404 |
| Other | 34 (60) | 23 (40) | 1.4 | 0.72–2.53 | 0.347 | 1.0 | 0.48–2.04 | 0.973 |
| Teaching medical students | ||||||||
| No | 101 (57) | 75 (43) | 1.0 | 1.0 | ||||
| Yes | 23 (35) | 42 (65) | 0.4 | 0.23–0.73 | 0.003 | 0.5 | 0.23–1.00 | 0.050 |
| Ever encountered fatal ADR | ||||||||
| No | 98 (55) | 79 (45) | 1.0 | 1.0 | ||||
| Yes | 26 (41) | 38 (59) | 0.6 | 0.31–0.99 | 0.044 | 0.7 | 0.35–1.42 | 0.327 |
| Involved in medical research | ||||||||
| No | 75 (51) | 71 (49) | 1.0 | 1.0 | ||||
| Yes | 49 (52) | 46 (48) | 1.0 | 0.60–1.69 | 0.975 | 1.8 | 0.96–3.43 | 0.068 |
| Gender | ||||||||
| Male | 57 (47) | 64 (53) | 1.0 | 1.0 | ||||
| Female | 67 (56) | 53 (44) | 1.4 | 0.85–2.36 | 0.176 | 1.4 | 0.70–2.82 | 0.334 |
| Suggestions for improved ADR reporting | ||||||||
| No | 21 (49) | 22 (51) | 1.0 | |||||
| Yes | 103 (52) | 95 (48) | 1.1 | 0.59–2.20 | 0.705 | |||
| Knows to whom to report | ||||||||
| No | 51 (45) | 63 (55) | 1.0 | |||||
| Yes | 73 (58) | 54 (42) | 1.7 | 1.00–2.78 | 0.049 | |||
| Patient ADR complaint | ||||||||
| No | 35 (55) | 29 (45) | 1.0 | |||||
| Yes | 89 (50) | 88 (50) | 0.8 | 0.47–1.49 | 0.546 | |||
* Covariates not fitted into the final logistic regression model.
Seriousness of the most recent past-month suspected ADRs described by 241 out of 268 HCPs who suspected ADRs in the previous month, Uganda, 2013.
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| Yes | 102 (50) | 88 (43) | 106 (44) | ||
| No | 93 (45) | 84 (41) | 97 (40) | ||
| Unassessable | 11 (5) | 31 (15) | 38 (16) | ||
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| Skin only | 34 (33) | 47 (51) | 7 (64) | 88 (43) | |
| CNS only | 11 (11) | 9 (10) | 0 (0) | 20 (10) | |
| GI only | 8 (8) | 9 (10) | 1 (9) | 18 (9) | |
| Skin & CNS | 3 (3) | 3 (3) | 0 (0) | 6 (3) | |
| Skin & GI | 1 (1) | 3 (3) | 0 (0) | 4 (2) | |
| CNS & GI | 2 (2) | 2 (2) | 0 (0) | 4 (2) | |
| Other | 43 (42) | 20 (21) | 3 (27) | 66 (31) | |
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| Antibacterials only | 13 (15) | 40 (48) | 17 (55) | 70 (34) | |
| Antiretrovirals only | 31 (35) | 7 (8) | 7 (23) | 45 (22) | |
| Antimalarials only | 12 (14) | 14 (17) | 2 (6) | 28 (14) | |
| Antibacterial & Antiretroviral | 0 (0) | 0 (0) | 1 (3) | 1 (1) | |
| Antibacterials & Antimalarials | 4 (4) | 0 (0) | 0 (0) | 4 (2) | |
| Other | 28 (32) | 23 (27) | 4 (13) | 55 (27) | |
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| Yes | 33 (31) | 18 (19) | 0 (0) | 51 (21) | |
| No | 46 (43) | 57 (59) | 6 (16) | 109 (45) | |
| Unknown | 27 (25) | 22 (22) | 32 (84) | 81 (34) | |
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Chi-square (2 df) = 6.42, P < 0.025 (if the “unassessable” column is excluded)
*Proportions of serious ADRs (across rows), and their 95% confidence intervals (95% CI) for a) body site: skin only, 39% (95% CI: 29%- 49%); CNS only, 55% (95% CI: 33%- 77%); GI only, 44% (95% CI: 21%- 67%); & other, 42% (95% CI: 30%- 54%); and for, b) drug class: antibacterials only, 24% (95% CI: 13%- 36%); antimalarials only, 46% (95% CI: 27%- 65%); antiretrovirals only, 82% (95% CI: 70%- 94%); & other, 58% (95% CI: 45%- 71%)
Survey-descriptions of 51 rare suspected Adverse Drug Reactions (ADRs) of Healthcare Professionals (HCPs) who suspected ADRs in the past 4 weeks.
| Level/Facility | Type/Facility | district | Region | Cadre | Nurse-cadre | HCP-Gender | HCP-Age | Rare ADR Description | Source |
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| Public | Private Hospital | KAMPALA | Central | Doctor | Male | 26 | 24YR/FEMALE KNOWN IMMUNOSUPPRESSED SYNDROME (ISS) PATIENT ON ANTI-TBS WHO REACTED TO COTRIMOXAZOLE—SJS & ALSO HAD TOXOPLASMOSIS | Cotrimoxazole; < 1 in 10,000—NHS, BNF | |
| Private For-Profit | Private Hospital | TORORO | Eastern | Doctor | Female | 28 | A MAN DIAGNOSED WITH HIV TOOK COTRIMOXAZOLE AND GOT STEVENS-JOHNSON SYNDROME SEVERE | Cotrimoxazole; < 1 in 10,000—NHS, BNF | |
| Private Not-for-Profit | District Hospital | MASINDI | Western | Nurse | Registered Nurse Midwife | Female | 43 | 40YRS,SEPTRIN,ORALLY.SJS | Cotrimoxazole; < 1 in 10,000—NHS, BNF |
| Private Not-for-Profit | Private Hospital | TORORO | Eastern | Other | Female | 25 | 38YR/MALE ON SEPTRIN DEVELOPED SJS—MODERATE | Cotrimoxazole; < 1 in 10,000—NHS, BNF | |
| Private For-Profit | National Referral | KAMPALA | Central | Doctor | Female | 32 | 36YR MALE ADMITTED WITH SJS FOLLOWING INITIATION OF ORAL NEVIRAPINE,SEVERE EVENT | NVP; 0.1–0.3%—ehealthme (1 per 1000),Mittmann et al 2012 (1–2 per 1000) | |
| Private For-Profit | Health Centre III | MASAKA | Southern | Other | Female | 27 | 32YR OLD REACTED TO ORAL NEVIRAPINE—SJS. REACTION WAS MODERATE | NVP; 0.1–0.3%—ehealthme (1 per 1000), Mittmann et al 2012 (1–2 per 1000) | |
| Private For-Profit | Private Hospital | WAKISO | Central | Doctor | Male | 27 | HIV+/FEMALE NEWLY ENROLLED ON HAART WITH NVP-BASED REGIMEN DEVELOPED SJS WHICH WAS SEVERE | NVP; 0.1–0.3%—ehealthme (1 per 1000), Mittmann et al 2012 (1–2 per 1000) | |
| Private Not-for-Profit | District Hospital | KAMPALA | Central | Doctor | Female | 33 | 28YR FEMALE ON ORAL DUOVIR-N (AZT/3TC/NVP), GOT RASH WHICH WORSENED & SHE DEVELOPED SJS | BNF | |
| Public | District Hospital | TORORO | Eastern | Nurse | Registered Nurse | Female | 48 | 32YR/FEMALE ISS PATIENT ON AZT/3TC/NVP FOR 3 MONTHS GOT SKIN RASH ALL OVER THE BODY—STEVEN JOHNSON SYNDROME—SEVERE | BNF |
| Public | Regional Referral | GULU | Northern | Pharm | Female | 26 | 22YR/FEMALE LADY NURSE WHO GOT NEEDLE STICK INJURY & WAS INITIATED ON PEP WITH AZT/3TC-12 DAYS LATER GOT SEVERE RASH (SJS) & WAS ADMITED AND TREATED |
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| Public | Health Centre III | JINJA | Eastern | Pharm | Female | 26 | 25YR OLD FEMALE ON CIPROFLOXACIN IV. GOT SJS.IT WAS SEVERE | BNF | |
| Private For-Profit | National Referral | KAMPALA | Central | Doctor | Female | 25 | SJS SECONDARY TO CARBAMAZEPINE | BNF | |
| Private Not-for-Profit | National Referral | KAMPALA | Central | Nurse | Registered Nurse | Female | 27 | SJS, MUCOSITIS (WHERE PATIENT CANNOT PUT ANYTHING IN THE MOUTH), DROP IN BLOOD COUNTS | No drug stated but SJS known to be a rare ADR |
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| Private Not-for-Profit | Health Centre IV | BUIKWE | Central | Nurse | Enrolled Comprehensive | Male | 25 | 58YR OLD ON ORAL COTRIMOXAZOLE GOT SEVERE URTICARIA AND SKIN RASHES ALL OVER THE BODY | BNF |
| Public | Health Centre III | GULU | Northern | Other | Male | 26 | 32YR/FEMALE KNOWN ISS PATIENT ON COTRIMOXAZOLE CAME WITH SEVERE BODY RASHES & SLOUGHING | BNF | |
| Private For-Profit | National Referral | KAMPALA | Central | Other | Male | 32 | 62YR/FEMALE ON COTRIMOXAZOLE ORAL ROUTE WITHIN TWO DAYS GOT MULTIPLE SKIN PATCHES, DEVELOPED SORES ON MUCOUS MEMBRANES WITH HIGH TEMPERATURE. GIVEN STEROIDS & SHE RECOVERED | BNF | |
| Public | Health Centre III | MITOOMA | Western | Other | Male | 27 | HIV+ PATIENT WITH BODY ACHES, SUDDEN SKIN RASH, BURNT SKIN, OOZING OF SWEAT-LIKE FLUID AFTER COTRIMOXAZOLE ADMINISTRATION—MILD SYMPTOMS | BNF | |
| Private For-Profit | Health Centre IV | TORORO | Eastern | Nurse | Registered Midwife | Female | 35 | 28YR OLD PATIENT WAS ADMINISTERED WITH COTRIMOXAZOLE TABLETS DEVELOPED BLACK PATCHES ON SKIN—MODERATE | BNF |
| Private For-Profit | Other | KAMPALA | Central | Nurse | Registered Nurse | Male | 33 | 42YR/FEMALE SERO-POSITIVE, NAIVE TO HAART WITH MILD ITCHY RASH, APPETITE LOSS, RISE IN BODY TEMPERATURE & ITCHING WHICH INTENSIFIED ON SWALLOWING SEPTRIN TABLETS FIVE WEEKS AGO. PATIENT RETURNED TO FACILITY & LAB INVESTIGATIONS SHOWED DERRANGED LIVER FUNCTION TEST VARIABLES | BNF |
| Public | Drug Shop | KAMULI | Eastern | Nurse | Enrolled Nurse | Female | 28 | OLD WOMAN REACTED TO SEPTRIN,GENERALIZED BODY SORES,GAVE HER PREDISOLONE & PAIN KILLER PLUS BETADERM TOPICAL (BETAMETHASONE) | BNF |
| Public | Health Centre III | JINJA | Eastern | Nurse | Enrolled Nurse | Female | 20 | 26YR/MALE HIV+ ON ORAL SEPTRIN,GOT BURNT FACE & LIPS-GIVEN ORALDEXAMETHASONE FOR FIVE DAYS—SEVERE | BNF |
| Public | District Hospital | TORORO | Eastern | Nurse | Nursing Assistant | Female | 50 | A 20YR OLD TAKING SEPTRIN ORALLY GOT SEVERE SKIN RASH ALL OVER THE BODY | BNF |
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| Public | Health Centre III | KAMPALA | Central | Other | Male | 32 | 28YR/FEMALE GOT BODY ITCHING AFTER TAKING ORAL QUININE. ADR WAS MODERATE | Itching = Pruritus; | |
| Private For-Profit | Drug Shop | KAMULI | Eastern | Nurse | Nursing Assistant | Male | 40 | 55YR OLD MALE ON QUININE TABS ORAL ROUTE GOT BODY ITCHING | Itching = Pruritus; |
| Private For-Profit | Pharmacy | JINJA | Eastern | Pharm | Female | 35 | PATIENT REACTED TO QUININE WITH ITCHING, TREATED IT WITH CETIRIZINE | Itching = Pruritus; | |
| Public | Drug Shop | JINJA | Eastern | Nurse | Registered Midwife | Male | 30 | 28YR OLD FEMALE REACTED TO QUININE IV LEADING TO MISCARRIAGE | Manufacturer's information leaflet: |
| Public | Private Hospital | MBRA | Southern | Nurse | Enrolled Nurse | Female | 50 | PATIENT ON ORAL QNN GOT SKIN RASH,TINNITUS,ABORTION,VERTIGO, NAUSEA, VOMITING, BLURRED VISION—SEVERE | Manufacturer's information leaflet-miscarriage = abortion: |
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| Private For-Profit | Private Hospital | TORORO | Eastern | Nurse | Enrolled Comprehensive | Female | 27 | 8YR OLD GIRL REFERRED FROM A CLINIC AFTER RECEIVING IV QUININE & SEPTRIN DEVELOPED BLISTERS ALL-OVER THE BODY & DIED ON ADMISSION—SEVERE | BNF |
| Private Not-for-Profit | Private Hospital | TORORO | Eastern | Nurse | Enrolled Comprehensive | Female | 30 | 5YR OLD GIRL FROM A CLINIC WHERE SHE WAS PUT ON IV QUININE & SEPTRIN. GOT BLISTERS ALL OVER THE BODY & DIED ON ADMISSION—SEVERE | BNF |
| Private For-Profit | Private Hospital | TORORO | Eastern | Nurse | Nursing Assistant | Female | 29 | 5YR OLD GIRL WAS REFERRED FROM A CLINIC AFTER TAKING IV QUININE & SEPTRIN WITH BLISTERS ALL-OVER THE BODY. SHE DIED ON ADMISSION—SEVERE | BNF |
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| Private Not-for-Profit | Health Centre IV | KAMPALA | Central | Other | Male | 34 | SWELLING OF FACE IN 16YR PATIENT AFTER SWALLOWING COARTEM (ORALLY)-MODERATE |
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| Private For-Profit | Regional Referral | LIRA | Northern | Nurse | Registered Nurse | Female | 27 | 26YR/MALE ON COARTEM ORAL ROUTE,RASH ON BOTH HANDS, ITCHING & SWELLING |
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| Public | Health Centre IV | JINJA | Eastern | Doctor | Male | 24 | 52YR OLD FEMALE ON COARTEM ORAL ROUTE DEVELOPED SORES ON THE WHOLE BODY |
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| Private Not-for-Profit | Health Centre IV | MASINDI | Western | Doctor | Male | 62 | 62YR/FEMALE ON ORAL MEPHAQUINE GOT SEVERE HEADACHE WITH MENTAL CONFUSION & INSOMNIA |
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| Private Not-for-Profit | Health Centre IV | TORORO | Eastern | Other | Male | 24 | 36YR OLD ON ORAL FANSIDAR (SULPHADOXINE/PYRIMETHAMINE) DEVELOPED HYPERPIGMENTATION OF THE SKIN & THE THROAT—MILD |
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| Private Not-for-Profit | Private Hospital | KAMPALA | Central | Doctor | Male | 28 | ORAL DICLOFENAC 50MG, HAEMOPTYSIS AFTER 2 DAYS—WAS SEVERE | Yiannakopoulou EC 2011, Van Renterghemet al 2012 | |
| Private For-Profit | Private Hospital | TORORO | Eastern | Nurse | Registered Comprehensive | Female | 29 | 65YR/FEMALE PATIENT'S BLOOD PRESSURE LOWERED FROM 105/60 TO 86/50 MMHG & STARTED SWEATING AT A TEMPERATURE OF 35.0 DEGREES CELSIUS DUE TO DYNAPAR (IV DICLOFENAC INFUSION)—MILD |
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| Public | National Referral | KAMPALA | Central | Doctor | Female | 39 | 45YR PATIENT ON ORAL TDF/3TC/NVP GOT SEVERE ABDOMINAL PAIN WHICH WAS IN COLICKY FORM |
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| Public | National Referral | KAMPALA | Central | Doctor | Male | 29 | ISS PATIENT WITH SKIN RASH,SCALING,ULCERATIONS FOR 2WKS THAT STARTED 1WK AFTER ART INITIATION OF COMBIVIR-NEVIRAPINE (AZT/3TC/NVP) | BNF | |
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| Public | District Hospital | BUIKWE | Central | Nurse | Registered Nurse | Female | 25 | MILD ADR.PATIENT ON ORAL EFV HAD GYNAECOMASTIA AND JERKS | BNF |
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| Public | Private Hospital | KAMPALA | Central | Pharm | Female | 24 | REACTION TO CEFTRIAXONE WITH MILD INFLAMATION &SWELLING AT POINT OF INJECTION | BNF | |
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| Public | Regional Referral | KAMPALA | Central | Doctor | Male | 28 | 26YR ANAEMIC FEMALE WITH SEVERE PRE-ECLAMPSIA FINALLY DELIVERED & WAS MANAGED POST-OPERATIVELY WITH GENTAMICIN-SUSTAINED ACUTE RENAL FAILURE WITH ANAEMIA FOR 5 DAYS & OTHER COMPLICATIONS | BNF | |
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| Private For-Profit | District Hospital | MASINDI | Western | Other | Male | 28YR/MALE—ALLERGIC REACTION TO ORAL CIPROFLOXACIN—SEVERE URTICARIA—SUBSTITUTED FOR CEPHALEXIN & CETIRIZINE | BNF | ||
| Public | Health Centre III | WAKISO | Central | Doctor | Female | 30 | CHILD ON IV CIPROFLOXACIN GOT BODY ITCH, SWELLING AROUND THE FACE & AROUND SITE OF THE INJECTION | BNF | |
| Public | National Referral | KAMPALA | Central | Nurse | Registered Nurse | Female | 26 | PATIENT WAS ON CIPRO AND GOT SWOLLEN HANDS | BNF |
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| Private For-Profit | Other | MASAKA | Southern | Nurse | Enrolled Nurse | Female | 28 | 23YR OLD,FLAGYL,ITCHING & NAUSEA,MILD | BNF |
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| Public | National Referral | KAMPALA | Central | Nurse | Registered Nurse Midwife | Female | 31 | SEVERE PALPITATIONS DUE TO OVER DOSE OF OMEPRAZOLE |
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| Private Not-for-Profit | National Referral | GULU | Northern | Doctor | Female | 35 | 41YR/MALE GIVEN PANADOL (PARACETAMOL), STARTED SHAKING & SWEATING 10 MINUTES LATER.WAS PUT ON A DRIP AND HE BECAME FINE. |
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| Public | Regional Referral | LIRA | Northern | Doctor | Female | 40 | 10YR/MALE REACTED TO PANADOL (PARACETAMOL) WHEN TOOTH WAS REMOVED, BECAME DIZZY-MINOR | Mescape—frequency not defined | |
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| Public | District Hospital | TORORO | Eastern | Nurse | Registered Mental Health | Female | 32 | 18YR/MALE MAN TAKING ORAL PHENORBABITONE GOT RASHES ALL OVER THE BODY SEVERE | BNF |
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| Public | Pharmacy | MBRA | Southern | Other | Male | 24YR/FEMALE DEVELOPED AN INFLAMATORY ITCHY RASH ALL-OVER AFTER TAKING ORAL PIPERAZINE,STOPPD IT AND PATIENT IMPROVED—MODERATE | BNF | ||
KEY: ADR = ADVERSE DRUG REACTION; ART = ANTIRETROVIRAL THERAPY; AZT = ZIDOVUDINE; BNF = BRITISH NATIONAL FORMULARY; EFV = EFAVIRENZ; FLAGYL = METRONIDAZOLE; HAART = HIGHLY ACTIVE ANTIRETROVIRAL THERAPY; ISS = IMMUNOSUPRESSED SYNDROME; IV = INTRAVENOUS; MEPHAQUINE = MEFLOQUINE; NVP = NEVIRAPINE; SEPTRIN = COTRIMOXAZOLE; SJS = STEVENS-JOHNSON SYNDROME; TDF = TENOFOVIR; 3TC = LAMIVUDINE;
* = CHECK APPENDIX S4 FOR TWO OR MORE DESCRIBED ADVERSE DRUG REACTIONS; PHARM = PHARMACIST/PHARMACY TECHNICIAN.