Publication | Open Access
Strengthening Medical Product Regulation in Low- and Middle-Income Countries
39
Citations
10
References
2012
Year
Global Health LawDiethylene Glycol PoisoningHealth LawCovid-19Preventive MedicineGlobal Health ProgramLow-cost Meningitis VaccineGlobal HealthcareRegulatory ConsiderationPublic HealthUniversal Health CareHealth PolicyGlobal Health CrisisRegulatory HarmonizationEpidemiologyMedical Device RegulationVaccinationRegulatory ApprovalGlobal HealthInternational HealthMedical Product RegulationMedicineGlobal Health EpidemiologyRegulationCase Studies
In summary, the case studies exploring global product supply chains and diethylene glycol poisoning in Panama, clinical trials regulation through AVAREF, premarket assurance through PEPFAR tentative approval, post-market surveillance in sub-Saharan Africa through research on drug and vaccine safety systems, and regulatory science through the creation of a low-cost meningitis vaccine for low- and middle-income countries, demonstrate the essential value of regulatory systems to low- and middle-income countries. When they work, people live; when they fail, people die. As the challenges of globalization mount, and efforts to provide medical products to low- and middle-income countries scale up, there is no better time to put regulatory system strengthening squarely on the global health and development agenda.
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