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#16 How drug safety can help fight resistant bugs – Jean Marie Vianney Habarugira & Albert Figueras
Manage episode 424661252 series 2749727
Managing antimicrobial resistance (AMR) will require innovative solutions from many different disciplines. Could pharmacovigilance be one of them? Jean Marie Vianney Habarugira and Albert Figueras, who have been investigating how drug safety tools could help track AMR, think it’s time the two communities joined forces for good.
Tune in to find out:
- How to code adverse drug reactions for optimal AMR surveillance
- How to use pharmacovigilance networks to track resistant pathogens and falsified antimicrobials
- Why collaborating with AMR specialists will benefit the drug safety community
Want to know more?
- In their study, Jean Marie and Albert shortlisted 17 MedDRA codes used to report AMR-related adverse drug reactions in a global and a national pharmacovigilance database.
- Pharmacovigilance tools could be especially useful in estimating the burden of AMR in low-resource communities that lack diagnostic lab capacity.
- Jean Marie’s research was inspired by this article in Uppsala Reports, which defined antimicrobial resistance as an overlooked adverse event.
- Since 2015, the World Health Organization’s GLASS (Global Antimicrobial Resistance and Use Surveillance System) has been used to collect, analyse, and share AMR data around the world.
Interested in AMR from a social perspective? Then don’t miss this Drug Safety Matters episode on behaviour change communication.
Join the conversation on social media
Follow us on X, LinkedIn, or Facebook and share your thoughts about the show with the hashtag #DrugSafetyMatters.
Got a story to share?
We’re always looking for new content and interesting people to interview. If you have a great idea for a show, get in touch!
About UMC
Read more about Uppsala Monitoring Centre and how we work to advance medicines safety.
52 एपिसोडस
Manage episode 424661252 series 2749727
Managing antimicrobial resistance (AMR) will require innovative solutions from many different disciplines. Could pharmacovigilance be one of them? Jean Marie Vianney Habarugira and Albert Figueras, who have been investigating how drug safety tools could help track AMR, think it’s time the two communities joined forces for good.
Tune in to find out:
- How to code adverse drug reactions for optimal AMR surveillance
- How to use pharmacovigilance networks to track resistant pathogens and falsified antimicrobials
- Why collaborating with AMR specialists will benefit the drug safety community
Want to know more?
- In their study, Jean Marie and Albert shortlisted 17 MedDRA codes used to report AMR-related adverse drug reactions in a global and a national pharmacovigilance database.
- Pharmacovigilance tools could be especially useful in estimating the burden of AMR in low-resource communities that lack diagnostic lab capacity.
- Jean Marie’s research was inspired by this article in Uppsala Reports, which defined antimicrobial resistance as an overlooked adverse event.
- Since 2015, the World Health Organization’s GLASS (Global Antimicrobial Resistance and Use Surveillance System) has been used to collect, analyse, and share AMR data around the world.
Interested in AMR from a social perspective? Then don’t miss this Drug Safety Matters episode on behaviour change communication.
Join the conversation on social media
Follow us on X, LinkedIn, or Facebook and share your thoughts about the show with the hashtag #DrugSafetyMatters.
Got a story to share?
We’re always looking for new content and interesting people to interview. If you have a great idea for a show, get in touch!
About UMC
Read more about Uppsala Monitoring Centre and how we work to advance medicines safety.
52 एपिसोडस
सभी एपिसोड
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1 #35 Veterinary pharmacovigilance part 2 – James Mount 41:42
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1 #34 Veterinary pharmacovigilance, Part I – James Mount 47:21
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1 #33 Narrative fields and signal assessors, an exploratory study – Joana Félix and Alem Zekarias 38:43
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1 #32 Pharmacovigilance in older adults – Giovanni Furlan 47:51
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1 #31 A guide to reporting disproportionality analyses – Michele Fusaroli and Daniele Sartori 42:45
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1 Uppsala Reports Long Reads – Weeding out duplicates to better detect side effects 25:02
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1 Uppsala Reports Long Reads – Ensuring trust in AI/ML when used in pharmacovigilance 30:18
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1 #30 Preventing and reporting medication errors – Rabat CC & UMC 33:58
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1 #29 When medicines change our behaviour – Michele Fusaroli 30:30
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1 #28 Catching black swans – François Montastruc 27:21
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1 #27 When drugs damage the liver – Rita Baião 28:30
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1 #26 What's trending in pharmacovigilance? – Angela Caro 28:06
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1 #25 A week in the name of medicines safety – part 2 33:13
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1 #24 A week in the name of medicines safety – part 1 27:09
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1 Uppsala Reports Long Reads – The colour of signals 33:59
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