NURS 6521
Week 11 Discussion Rubric Criteria #2 Correction
Strategies to making off-label use and dosage of drugs safer for children from infancy
... [Show More] to
adolescence
Children are entitled to be delivered safe and appropriate medication in the right strength, dose,
indication, and administration channel. There are various undesired effects associated with offlabel medication use in children. Children and ill neonates are the most susceptible to the
development of severe side effects, and hence to safeguard them, it is important to adhere to the
following strategies.
1. Federal legislation to increase drug testing in children
Some federal laws such as the Pediatric Research Equity Act (PREA) and the Best
Pharmaceuticals for Children Act (BPCA) have greatly focused on clinical assessment and drug
labeling among children through government trials and pharmaceutical industry (Frattarelli et al.,
2014). The PREA holds that nearly every new medication and some other certified medications
ought to be studied among children for certified applications of the agent in case there is a likely
use of the medication among children and that the use of new medications for the approval of
new medications incorporate the outcomes of sufficient pediatric studies lest the research is
delayed or renounced by the Food and Drug Association. The BPCA enables stakeholders to
meet the criteria for a further half a year exclusive from the market in case the stakeholders
complete and present pediatric studies to the Food and Drug Administration, as illustrated in the
request written by the FDA. A documented request can incorporate off-label and also certified
application of medication. Furthermore, the BPCA mandates the National Institute of Health in
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collaboration with the Food and Drug Administration and doctors form medical disciplines, to
work jointly in signing priority to test certain medications in children.
The approval of the two regulations is perceived as a big success since there has been no less
than 500 changes in pediatric labeling (Frattarelli et al., 2014). Besides, due to the regulations,
there has been an increase in prospective pediatric drug testing through studies sponsored by the
industry, studies initiated by the investigator, and consortia, for example, the National Institute of
Child Health and Human Development–funded Pediatric Trials Network. The overall outcome
has been an extension of knowledge base and pediatric labeling information out of which care
providers can draw in making informed therapeutic choices (Frattarelli et al., 2014).
2. Therapeutic decision-making
The available evidence has always guided clinical decision making and the health of an
individual client. Care providers make use of their expertise to establish medication use among
children. Under such scenarios, a care provider may be helpful in the addition of treatment
knowledge through the publication of her or his off-label medication use experience. The reports
can fill in as the platform of further formal effectiveness and safety studies and also as a
treatment resource for decision making for other care providers (Frattarelli et al., 2014). Care
providers agree on the significance of observing evidence-based practice. Overall, in case the
existing evidence backs the application of medication for certain use in a specific client, the
informed consent discussion ought to be performed, incorporating the expected undesired effects,
the advantages, and the available options. In case the off-label application is on the premise of
clinical evidence, there is no further sound consent apart from the normally used in treatment
decision making required. [Show Less]