The Textbook of Pharmacoepidemiology provides a streamlined text for evaluating the safety and effectiveness of medicines. It includes a brief introduction to pharmacoepidemiology as well as sections on data sources, methodology and applications. Each chapter includes key points, case studies and essential references. In recent years the public has clearly become markedly more interested in assuring the safety and effectiveness of its medicines. It is also critical that available medicines are used optimally, by both health care practitioners and patients. We need to know the extent to…mehr
The Textbook of Pharmacoepidemiology provides a streamlined text for evaluating the safety and effectiveness of medicines. It includes a brief introduction to pharmacoepidemiology as well as sections on data sources, methodology and applications. Each chapter includes key points, case studies and essential references.In recent years the public has clearly become markedly more interested in assuring the safety and effectiveness of its medicines. It is also critical that available medicines are used optimally, by both health care practitioners and patients. We need to know the extent to which an intervention does what it is really intended to do, under routine circumstances rather than ideal conditions, for those who receive it. Appropriate and valid pharmacoepidemiology methods are central to evaluating the safety and effectiveness of medicines and their use. This textbook is the abridged version of Brian Strom's Pharmacoepidemiology Fourth Edition, and presents the essential material for such evaluations.
It provides methods, details of potential data sources, and information about evaluating the results and drawing conclusions. The layout and easy to read style will provide an accessible introduction to pharmacoepidemiology as well as a reference source for academics, public health practitioners, regulatory agencies, the pharmaceutical industry and the law.Hinweis: Dieser Artikel kann nur an eine deutsche Lieferadresse ausgeliefert werden.
Brian L. Strom, University of Pennsylvania School of Medicine, USA. Stephen E. Kimmel, Associate Professor of Medicine and Epidemiology, University of Pennsylvania School of Medicine, USA.
Inhaltsangabe
List of Contributors. Preface. Acknowledgments. Acknowledgments from Pharmacoepidemiology Fourth Edition. SECTION I INTRODUCTION TO PHARMACOEPIDEMIOLOGY. 1. What is Pharmacoepidemiology? (Brian L. Strom). 2. Study Designs Available for Pharmacoepidemiology Studies (Brian L. Strom). 3. Sample Size Considerations for Pharmacoepidemiology Studies (Brian L. Strom). 4. Basic Principles of Clinical Pharmacology Relevant to Pharmacoepidemiology Studies (Sean Hennessy). 5. When Should One Perform Pharmacoepidemiology Studies? (Brian L. Strom). 6. Views from Academia Industry and Regulatory Agencies (Leanne K. Madre Robert M. Califf Robert F. Reynolds Peter Arlett and Jane Moseley). SECTION II SOURCES OF PHARMACOEPIDEMIOLOGY DATA. 7. Spontaneous Reporting in the United States (Syed Rizwanuddin Ahmad Norman S. Marks and Roger A. Goetsch). 8. Global Drug Surveillance: The WHO Programme for International Drug Monitoring (I. Ralph Edwards Sten Olsson Marie Lindquist and Bruce Hugman). 9. Case-Control Surveillance (Lynn Rosenberg Patricia F. Coogan and Julie R. Palmer). 10. Prescription-Event Monitoring (Saad A.W. Shakir). 11. Overview of Automated Databases in Pharmacoepidemiology (Brian L. Strom). 12. Examples of Automated Databases (Andy Stergachis Kathleen W. Saunders Robert L. Davis Stephen E. Kimmel Rita Schinnar K. Arnold Chan Deborah Shatin Nigel S.B. Rawson Sean Hennessy Winanne Downey MaryRose Stang Patricia Beck William Osei Hubert G. Leufkens Thomas M. MacDonald and Joel M. Gelfand). 13. Other Approaches to Pharmacoepidemiology Studies (Brian L. Strom). 14. How Should One Perform Pharmacoepidemiology Studies? Choosing Among the Available Alternatives (Brian L. Strom). 15. Validity of Pharmacoepidemiologic Drug and Diagnosis Data (Suzanne L. West Brian L. Strom and Charles Poole). SECTION III SPECIAL ISSUES IN PHARMACOEPIDEMIOLOGY METHODOLOGY. 16. Bias and Confounding in Pharmacoepidemiology (Ilona Csizmadi and Jean-Paul Collet). 17. Determining Causation from Case Reports (Judith K. Jones). 18. Molecular Pharmacoepidemiology (Stephen E. Kimmel). 19. Bioethical Issues in Pharmacoepidemiologic Research (Kevin Haynes Jason Karlawish and Elizabeth B. Andrews). 20. The Use of Randomized Controlled Trials for Pharmacoepidemiology Studies (Samuel M. Lesko and Allen A. Mitchell). 21. The Use of Pharmacoepidemiology to Study Beneficial Drug Effects (Brian L. Strom). 22. Pharmacoeconomics: Economic Evaluation of Pharmaceuticals (Kevin A. Schulman Henry A. Glick and Daniel Polsky). 23. Using Quality-of-Life Measurements in Pharmacoepidemiologic Research (Holger Schünemann Gordon H. Guyatt and Roman Jaeschke). 24. The Use of Meta-analysis in Pharmacoepidemiology (Carin J. Kim and Jesse A. Berlin). 25. Patient Adherence to Prescribed Drug Dosing Regimens in Ambulatory Pharmacotherapy (John Urquhart and Bernard Vrijens). 26. Novel Approaches to Pharmacoepidemiology Study Design and Statistical Analysis (Samy Suissa). SECTION IV SPECIAL APPLICATIONS OF PHARMACOEPIDEMIOLOGY. 27. Special Applications of Pharmacoepidemiology (David Lee Sumit R. Majumdar Helene Levens Lipton Stephen B. Soumerai Sean Hennessy Robert L. Davis Robert T. Chen Roselie A. Bright Allen A. Mitchell David J. Graham David W. Bates and Brian L. Strom). 28. The Future of Pharmacoepidemiology (Brian L. Strom and Stephen E. Kimmel). Appendix A Sample Size Tables. Appendix B Glossary. Index.
List of Contributors. Preface. Acknowledgments. Acknowledgments from Pharmacoepidemiology Fourth Edition. SECTION I INTRODUCTION TO PHARMACOEPIDEMIOLOGY. 1. What is Pharmacoepidemiology? (Brian L. Strom). 2. Study Designs Available for Pharmacoepidemiology Studies (Brian L. Strom). 3. Sample Size Considerations for Pharmacoepidemiology Studies (Brian L. Strom). 4. Basic Principles of Clinical Pharmacology Relevant to Pharmacoepidemiology Studies (Sean Hennessy). 5. When Should One Perform Pharmacoepidemiology Studies? (Brian L. Strom). 6. Views from Academia Industry and Regulatory Agencies (Leanne K. Madre Robert M. Califf Robert F. Reynolds Peter Arlett and Jane Moseley). SECTION II SOURCES OF PHARMACOEPIDEMIOLOGY DATA. 7. Spontaneous Reporting in the United States (Syed Rizwanuddin Ahmad Norman S. Marks and Roger A. Goetsch). 8. Global Drug Surveillance: The WHO Programme for International Drug Monitoring (I. Ralph Edwards Sten Olsson Marie Lindquist and Bruce Hugman). 9. Case-Control Surveillance (Lynn Rosenberg Patricia F. Coogan and Julie R. Palmer). 10. Prescription-Event Monitoring (Saad A.W. Shakir). 11. Overview of Automated Databases in Pharmacoepidemiology (Brian L. Strom). 12. Examples of Automated Databases (Andy Stergachis Kathleen W. Saunders Robert L. Davis Stephen E. Kimmel Rita Schinnar K. Arnold Chan Deborah Shatin Nigel S.B. Rawson Sean Hennessy Winanne Downey MaryRose Stang Patricia Beck William Osei Hubert G. Leufkens Thomas M. MacDonald and Joel M. Gelfand). 13. Other Approaches to Pharmacoepidemiology Studies (Brian L. Strom). 14. How Should One Perform Pharmacoepidemiology Studies? Choosing Among the Available Alternatives (Brian L. Strom). 15. Validity of Pharmacoepidemiologic Drug and Diagnosis Data (Suzanne L. West Brian L. Strom and Charles Poole). SECTION III SPECIAL ISSUES IN PHARMACOEPIDEMIOLOGY METHODOLOGY. 16. Bias and Confounding in Pharmacoepidemiology (Ilona Csizmadi and Jean-Paul Collet). 17. Determining Causation from Case Reports (Judith K. Jones). 18. Molecular Pharmacoepidemiology (Stephen E. Kimmel). 19. Bioethical Issues in Pharmacoepidemiologic Research (Kevin Haynes Jason Karlawish and Elizabeth B. Andrews). 20. The Use of Randomized Controlled Trials for Pharmacoepidemiology Studies (Samuel M. Lesko and Allen A. Mitchell). 21. The Use of Pharmacoepidemiology to Study Beneficial Drug Effects (Brian L. Strom). 22. Pharmacoeconomics: Economic Evaluation of Pharmaceuticals (Kevin A. Schulman Henry A. Glick and Daniel Polsky). 23. Using Quality-of-Life Measurements in Pharmacoepidemiologic Research (Holger Schünemann Gordon H. Guyatt and Roman Jaeschke). 24. The Use of Meta-analysis in Pharmacoepidemiology (Carin J. Kim and Jesse A. Berlin). 25. Patient Adherence to Prescribed Drug Dosing Regimens in Ambulatory Pharmacotherapy (John Urquhart and Bernard Vrijens). 26. Novel Approaches to Pharmacoepidemiology Study Design and Statistical Analysis (Samy Suissa). SECTION IV SPECIAL APPLICATIONS OF PHARMACOEPIDEMIOLOGY. 27. Special Applications of Pharmacoepidemiology (David Lee Sumit R. Majumdar Helene Levens Lipton Stephen B. Soumerai Sean Hennessy Robert L. Davis Robert T. Chen Roselie A. Bright Allen A. Mitchell David J. Graham David W. Bates and Brian L. Strom). 28. The Future of Pharmacoepidemiology (Brian L. Strom and Stephen E. Kimmel). Appendix A Sample Size Tables. Appendix B Glossary. Index.
Rezensionen
" a useful textbook for upper level undergraduate, graduate, and postdoctoral fellows in pharmacy, medical, and public health programs." ( The Annals of Pharmacotherapy , June 2007) "This is a major text with far reaching impact recommended for all courses in public health or pharmacology " ( Electric Review , March/April 2007)
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