Communicating information about drug safety

Abstract
It can be hard to interpret information about potential harms from drugs, whether through adverse effects or drug interactions. A simple visual coding system could help Prescribers and patients need information about the established harms of a drug as well as its benefits. This information helps prescribers to calculate the likely balance of benefit to harm before prescribing a drug. It also enables them to avoid using a drug in circumstances of particular risk (for example, renal insufficiency), to choose preventive strategies (for example, using a bisphosphonate to prevent glucocorticoid induced osteoporosis), to know when to monitor for harm when the risk is defined (for example, regular blood counts in patients taking clozapine), and to recognise an adverse reaction when it occurs. Patients need to know about harms for similar reasons. They need to be able to decide whether the likely benefit outweighs the potential harm. They may be more aware than the prescriber of circumstances that prevent their taking the drug. And it is in their interest to be alert to the possibility that an unwanted event that occurs while they are taking the drug is an adverse drug reaction. What is the best way to provide information about drug harms? Ideally, prescribing information should list the potential harmful effects of every drug together with the following information about each effect: its relation to the dose, its time course, the factors that alter an individual's susceptibility to it, its seriousness, and the probability of it occurring, at least in the population and preferably in the individual. In practice, however, this information is rarely available, for several reasons. Firstly, most drug studies focus on benefits and are relatively poor at detecting harms, for which larger studies are required. Harms can be hard to detect for reasons that relate to the …