Guest guest Posted March 10, 2010 Report Share Posted March 10, 2010 The Missing Voice of Patients in Drug-Safety Reporting The New England Journal of Medicine . March 10th, 2010 Ethan Basch, M.D. A patient wants to know about symptoms she may have from a prescription drug she is taking. Consulting the label's " Adverse Reactions " section, she finds a wealth of data. Little does she realize that this information, largely collected during clinical trials, is based almost entirely on clinicians' impressions of patients' symptoms - not on patients' own firsthand reports of their experiences with the drug. The current drug-labeling practice for adverse events is based on the implicit assumption that an accurate portrait of patients' subjective experiences can be provided by clinicians' documentation alone. Yet a substantial body of evidence contradicts this assumption, showing that clinicians systematically downgrade the severity of patients' symptoms, that patients' self-reports frequently capture side effects that clinicians miss, and that clinicians' failure to note these symptoms results in the occurrence of preventable adverse events.1,2 Full story http://healthcarereform.nejm.org/?p=3140 & query=TOC ---------- No virus found in this outgoing message. Checked by AVG - www.avg.com Version: 8.5.436 / Virus Database: 271.1.1/2734 - Release Date: 03/10/10 07:33:00 Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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