Achieving the World Health Organization's vision for clinical pharmacology

Clinical pharmacology is a medical specialty whose practitioners teach, undertake research, frame policy, give information and advice about the actions and proper uses of medicines in humans and implement that knowledge in clinical practice. It involves a combination of several activities: drug disc...

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Veröffentlicht in:British journal of clinical pharmacology 2016-02, Vol.81 (2), p.223-227
Hauptverfasser: Martin, Jennifer H., Henry, David, Gray, Jean, Day, Richard, Bochner, Felix, Ferro, Albert, Pirmohamed, Munir, Mörike, Klaus, Schwab, Matthias
Format: Artikel
Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Clinical pharmacology is a medical specialty whose practitioners teach, undertake research, frame policy, give information and advice about the actions and proper uses of medicines in humans and implement that knowledge in clinical practice. It involves a combination of several activities: drug discovery and development, training safe prescribers, providing objective and evidence‐based therapeutic information to ethics, regulatory and pricing bodies, supporting patient care in an increasingly subspecialized arena where co‐morbidities, polypharmacy, altered pharmacokinetics and drug interactions are common and developing and contributing to medicines policies for Governments. Clinical pharmacologists must advocate drug quality and they must also advocate for sustainability of the Discipline. However for this they need appropriate clinical service and training support. This Commentary discusses strategies to ensure the Discipline is supported by teaching, training and policy organizations, to communicate the full benefits of clinical pharmacology services, put a monetary value on clinical pharmacology services and to grow the clinical pharmacology workforce to support a growing clinical, academic and regulatory need.
ISSN:0306-5251
1365-2125
DOI:10.1111/bcp.12803