| Literature DB >> 25926798 |
Sandor Kerpel-Fronius1, Bernd Rosenkranz2, Elizabeth Allen3, Rolf Bass4, Jacques D Mainard5, Alex Dodoo6, Dominique J Dubois7, Mandisa Hela8, Steven Kern9, Joao Massud10, Honorio Silva11, Jeremy Whitty12.
Abstract
The aim of this satellite workshop held at the 17th World Congress of Basic and Clinical Pharmacology (WCP2014) was to discuss the needs, optimal methods and practical approaches for extending education and teaching of medicines development, regulation, and clinical research to Low and Middle Income Countries (LMICs). It was generally agreed that, for efficiently treating the rapidly growing number of patients suffering from non-communicable diseases, modern drug therapy has to become available more widely and with a shorter time lag in these countries. To achieve this goal many additional experts working in medicines development, regulation, and clinical research have to be trained in parallel. The competence-oriented educational programs designed within the framework of the European Innovative Medicine Initiative-PharmaTrain (IMI-PhT) project were developed with the purpose to cover these interconnected fields. In addition, the programs can be easily adapted to the various local needs, primarily due to their modular architecture and well defined learning outcomes. Furthermore, the program is accompanied by stringent quality assurance standards which are essential for providing internationally accepted certificates. Effective cooperation between international and local experts and organizations, the involvement of the industry, health care centers and governments is essential for successful education. The initiative should also support the development of professional networks able to manage complex health care strategies. In addition it should help establish cooperation between neighboring countries for jointly managing clinical trials, as well as complex regulatory and ethical issues.Entities:
Keywords: clinical trials; competencies; learning outcomes; low and middle income countries; pharmaceutical medicine; regulatory agencies
Year: 2015 PMID: 25926798 PMCID: PMC4396384 DOI: 10.3389/fphar.2015.00080
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Pharmacol ISSN: 1663-9812 Impact factor: 5.810
Different medical needs of the various populations present in LMIC’s.
| Higher income population | Low income population |
|---|---|
| Well educated | Poorly educated |
| Can afford modern medical care | May live in an unhygienic environment and cannot afford modern medical care |
| Access to health-care is similar or occasionally even better than in developed countries. Demand and require modern, well equipped medical facilities and highly effective medicines to treat broad range of illnesses. Medical personnel who can apply up-to-date treatment, can participate in international trials and can organize local clinical trials | Access to health-care is limited Receives generally poorer medical care since the delivery of modern therapeutic methods is made difficult due to large distances and a lack of infrastructure. Suffers primarily from communicable diseases. Special organization and specially trained personnel is needed to treat NCD affecting a large population |
| Regulatory Agency which can adequately handle both modern sophisticated medicines and an increased work load caused by innovative and many follow-on chemical and biological medicines | |