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Effective drug regulation a multicountry study. Sauwakon Ratanawijitrasin, Eshetu Wondemagegnehu.

By: Ratanawijitrasin, SauwakonContributor(s): Wondemagegnehu, EshetuMaterial type: TextTextPublication details: Geneva : World Health Organization, 2002. Description: ix, 142 p. : ill. ; 30 cmISBN: 9241562064Subject(s): Pharmaceutical policy | DrugsNLM classification: QV 33 E 2002Summary: Drugs play a crucial role in saving lives, restoring health, and preventing diseases and epidemics. But they need to be safe, efficacious, of good quality, and used rationally. This means that their production, import/export, storage, supply and distribution should be subject to government control through prescribed norms and standards and an effective regulatory system. Substandard and counterfeit drugs proliferate primarily in an environment where drug regulation has proved ineffective. This publication presents a synthesis of studies on drug regulation carried out in 10 countries: Australia, Cuba, Cyprus, Estonia, Malaysia, the Netherlands, Tunisia, Uganda, Venezuela, and Zimbabwe in 1998-1999. It gives an overview of the development of drug regulation in these countries as well as the resources available and the strategies applied in drug regulation implementation at the time the studies were conducted. An analysis of the strengths and weaknesses in drug regulation in these countries is also provided.
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Item type Current library Call number Status Date due Barcode
WHO Publications WHO Publications FNPH LIBRARY
QV 33 E 2002 (Browse shelf(Opens below)) Available 03612
WHO Publications WHO Publications FNPH LIBRARY
QV 33 E 2002 (Browse shelf(Opens below)) Available 02858

Includes bibliographical references (p. 141-142).

Drugs play a crucial role in saving lives, restoring health, and preventing diseases and epidemics. But they need to be safe, efficacious, of good quality, and used rationally. This means that their production, import/export, storage, supply and distribution should be subject to government control through prescribed norms and standards and an effective regulatory system. Substandard and counterfeit drugs proliferate primarily in an environment where drug regulation has proved ineffective.

This publication presents a synthesis of studies on drug regulation carried out in 10 countries: Australia, Cuba, Cyprus, Estonia, Malaysia, the Netherlands, Tunisia, Uganda, Venezuela, and Zimbabwe in 1998-1999. It gives an overview of the development of drug regulation in these countries as well as the resources available and the strategies applied in drug regulation implementation at the time the studies were conducted. An analysis of the strengths and weaknesses in drug regulation in these countries is also provided.

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