%0 Journal Article %T Knowledge of adverse drug reaction reporting in first year postgraduate doctors in a medical college %A Upadhyaya P %A Seth V %A Moghe VV %A Sharma M %A Ahmed M %J Therapeutics and Clinical Risk Management %D 2012 %I %R http://dx.doi.org/10.2147/TCRM.S31482 %X owledge of adverse drug reaction reporting in first year postgraduate doctors in a medical college Original Research (1440) Total Article Views Authors: Upadhyaya P, Seth V, Moghe VV, Sharma M, Ahmed M Published Date June 2012 Volume 2012:8 Pages 307 - 312 DOI: http://dx.doi.org/10.2147/TCRM.S31482 Received: 05 March 2012 Accepted: 17 April 2012 Published: 19 June 2012 Prerna Upadhyaya,1 Vikas Seth,2 Vijay V Moghe,1 Monika Sharma,1 Mushtaq Ahmed1 1Department of Pharmacology, Mahatma Gandhi Medical College, Sitapura, Jaipur, Rajasthan, 2Department of Pharmacology, Hind Institute of Medical Sciences, Safedabad, Barabanki, Lucknow, Uttar Pradesh, India Introduction: Poor reporting of adverse drug reactions (ADRs) by doctors is a major hindrance to successful pharmacovigilance. The present study was designed to assess first-year residents¡¯ knowledge of ADR reporting. Methods: First-year postgraduate doctors at a private medical college completed a structured questionnaire. The responses were analyzed by nonparametric methods. Results: All doctors were aware of the term ¡°adverse drug reactions.¡± Fifty percent of the doctors reported being taught about ADR reporting during their undergraduate teaching, and 50% had witnessed ADRs in their internship training. Ten percent of patients suffering an ADR observed and reported by doctors required prolonged hospitalization for treatment as a result. Only 40% of interns reported the ADRs that they observed, while 60% did not report them. Twenty-eight percent reported ADRs to the head of the department, 8% to an ADR monitoring committee, and 4% to the pharmacovigilance center. Eighty-six percent of the doctors surveyed felt that a good knowledge of undergraduate clinical pharmacology therapeutics would have improved the level of ADR reporting. Conclusion: The knowledge of first-year doctors regarding ADR reporting is quite poor. There is a dire need to incorporate ADR reporting into undergraduate teaching, and to reinforce this during internships and periodically thereafter. %K ADR reporting %K pharmacovigilance %K first-year postgraduate doctors %U https://www.dovepress.com/knowledge-of-adverse-drug-reaction-reporting-in-first-year-postgraduat-peer-reviewed-article-TCRM