Improving pediatric medications Flashcards
1
Q
What is compounding?
A
manipulating a medication to achieve a desired dose or to ease administration
- Quality controls are weaker than for commercially prepared products
- Some formulations are commercially available in US or EU but not marketed in Canada
2
Q
How can pediatric medications be improved in Canada?
A
- Establish & fund permanent Expert Pediatric Advisory Board (EPAB).
- Direct Health Canada to:
- proactively solicit and review pediatric-specific drug data when pediatric use is anticipated
- Develop policy pathways to increase submissions for pediatric medications, indications, and formulations
- work with Health Technology Assessment agencies to develop and evaluate pediatric-specific standrads
- Direct Health Canada to:
- promotes use of reviews and decisions to support efficient commercialization of priority pediatric medications and child-friendly formulations
- Review the Special Access Program to support timely access to essential medications
- Fund the development of a national, comprehensive, continuously updated online resource to support consistent, evidence-informed prescribing in all centres and jursidictiosn across Canada
- Invest in pediatric drug research and clinical trial infrastructure ensuring alignment between priority regulatory, reimbursement, and research activities
3
Q
What are the 4 steps to establish public reimbursement?
A
- Health Technology Assessment (HTA) is conducted by Canadian Agency for Drugs and Technologies in Canada (CADTH)
- Pricing review done by Patented Medicines Pricing Review Board (PMPRB) that ensures prices for patented meds aren’t excessive
- Pricing negotiation done by pan-Canadian Pharmaceutical Alliance (pCPA)
- Independent provincial/territorial/federal program reviews to determine appropriateness for listing on the public formulary