Improving drug use for children in the developing world
Open Access
- 7 June 2005
- journal article
- review article
- Published by BMJ in Archives of Disease in Childhood
- Vol. 90 (10) , 1091-1093
- https://doi.org/10.1136/adc.2005.076703
Abstract
Children differ significantly from adults in the way they absorb, metabolise, and excrete drugs.1 These parameters also vary as children grow from neonates through to adolescence. The practical implications and challenges that this presents are well know to anyone who is involved in the medical management of sick children. The importance of paediatric medication safety and efficacy has been gaining increasing attention in the developed world over the past decade. The United States has introduced a carrot and stick approach to increase research into medications for children with the “paediatric exclusivity provision” and the “paediatric rule”. The European Union is also investigating ways of improving the availability of medications for children. Unfortunately, this increased focus on appropriate medicines for children, which has occurred in the developed world, has not been mirrored in developing nations. Currently more than 10 million children under the age of 5 years die each year,2, 3 with only six countries accounting for 50% of these deaths. The majority of these deaths are from treatable or preventable diseases.4 The developed world has a moral and ethical obligation to share its gains with the children of the world.Keywords
This publication has 13 references indexed in Scilit:
- Emerging consensus in HIV/AIDS, malaria, tuberculosis, and access to essential medicinesThe Lancet, 2005
- Predicting the distribution of under-five deaths by cause in countries without adequate vital registration systemsInternational Journal of Epidemiology, 2003
- Diethylene glycol poisoning in Gurgaon, India, 1998.2003
- Developmental Pharmacology — Drug Disposition, Action, and Therapy in Infants and ChildrenNew England Journal of Medicine, 2003
- Where and why are 10 million children dying every year?The Lancet, 2003
- Essential medicines twenty-five years on: closing the access gap.Health Policy and Planning, 2003
- Twenty-five years of essential medicines.2002
- Drugs for neglected diseases: a failure of the market and a public health failure?Tropical Medicine & International Health, 2001
- The decline in child mortality: a reappraisal.2000
- Diethylene glycol poisoning in Nigerian childrenPaediatrics and International Child Health, 1992