
Medicines
Control Agency slated by Commons committee
Debashis
Singh, BMJ

The former
Medicines Control Agency has received a damning blow from the House of
Commons Committee of Public Accounts.
The committee’s
report, Safety, Quality, Efficacy: Regulating Medicines in the UK, criticises
the agency for its “lack of dynamism” in improving public
health and for its “non-existent” public profile, which made
it difficult for it to function as a provider of safety information.
The agency
was, until earlier this year, responsible for protecting public health
by ensuring the safety, quality, and efficacy of the one billion medicines
that are prescribed and sold over the counter in the United Kingdom each
year. It inspects manufacturing and supply facilities and monitors the
risks and benefits of existing medicines.
The agency
was set up in 1989. In April 2003, it merged with the Medical Devices
Agency to form the Medicines and Healthcare Products Regulatory Agency,
which now inherits the responsibilities of the Medicines Control Agency.
The committee
looked at the Medicines Control Agency’s performance against its
key objectives of promoting and safeguarding public health through the
regulation and provision of information on medicines, and its service
to stakeholders.
The report
was critical of the poor quality of information leaflets and labels, designed
to alert patients and doctors to potential risks of medication, and the
low level of reporting of adverse reactions to medicines by doctors. These
were cited as evidence of the lack of dynamism to drive further improvements
in the protection of public health.
The report
added that the widespread but unmonitored practice of prescribing drugs
to children that, although licensed, were not specifically approved for
paediatric use was also cause for concern.
The committee
also highlighted the irony that an agency whose mission was to put across
safety messages to the public had a non-existent public profile. Even
doctors had little awareness of its role. Unlike the US Food and Drug
Administration, the agency failed to embrace advertising and awareness
campaigns necessary for developing a relationship with the public, says
the report.
The committee
hopes that the creation of the Medicines and Healthcare Products Regulatory
Agency will be a good opportunity to rectify some of the failings of its
predecessor. It wants to see the new body develop training for doctors
on monitoring the safety of medicines, as well as establishing an effective
communications and awareness strategy for conveying safety messages both
to the public and to health practitioners.
Edward Leigh
MP, chairman of the Committee of Public Accounts, said: “It is simply
unacceptable that the agency’s efforts to drive improvements in
the protection of public health have been so lacklustre.”
Safety, Quality,
Efficacy: Regulating Medicines in the UK (26th report of session 2002-3)
is available at:
http://www.parliament.uk
Source: BMJ 2003;
327:10 (5 July)
http://bmj.com/cgi/content/full/327/7405/10
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