

The Minister of Health,
Mr Gerolamo Sirchia, has decided to approach the very serious problems emerging
from the tragic consequences following the administration of Cerivastatine-based
drugs in a decidedly new way, as regards possible ministerial actions.
And he could not behave other than he did, taking into account that he is
a doctor and a scientist. Indeed one cannot expect surveillance on the composition,
indications, contraindications, interactions, therapeutic effectiveness, possible
side effects and risks deriving from possible overdoses of drugs resulting
from worldwide scientific research with doctors who do not adopt a reliable
scientific and cultural approach to every aspect of drug-surveillance relating
to that specific drug.
“The first issue is to teach doctors to use drugs properly” Mr Sirchia started
off; “we shall instruct doctors through the Internet, with seminars designed
for groups of doctors within the various Health Units and Hospitals and with
a pharmacologist who will be communicating with them at a distance, by giving
life to collective discussions on cases relating to specific patients, and
putting question to make sure that the “students” have understood the point.”
Indeed, the issue of drug surveillance, which has been so much trumpeted by
insiders over the last few days, could not be expected to have any valid application
unless proper communication exists between those who are in charge of surveillance,
and are to convey the necessary instructions on what needs to be supervised,
and those who prescribe the drugs, follow the patients to whom drugs have
been prescribed, based both on the information acquired through the technical
specifications attached to the product and the reports received from the bodies
in charge of drug-surveillance, take note of any abnormalities and report
them to the Health Units or to the Ministry.
But this issue does not only relate to drugs. The importance of keeping continuously
up-to-date from a professional point of view has now become for doctors a
very topical issue, which involves all branches of medicine, both general
and specialistic. In an age in which technology, pharmaceutical chemistry,
genetics, immunology an other medical fields of knowledge are updated at a
speed which would have been inconceivable up to a few years ago, also affecting
the very basic principles of human life, it is not possible to operate on
the basis of knowledge acquired at a distance of time and which has not been
continuously updated. Of course, we cannot say that doctors neglect this aspect
of their professional training, but willingness to learn is not sufficient
to ensure a systematic updating process. Indeed, the supply of refresher courses
and seminars is extremely high; in theory, one could therefore object that
doctors do not lack the opportunity to keep up-to-date.
The problem is that we lack a joint coordination and a systematic refresher
programme which makes it possible over a year, or maybe even over a three-year
period, to reach all doctors in all branches of medicine, and physically check
out and certify their actual knowledge. Of course, today we have the Internet,
an extremely effective tool to reach all doctors in real time and keep them
continuously up-to-date without having to move around too much, and providing
at the same time the opportunity to communicate with them and obtain feedback.
It naturally is essential for the Ministry of Health, in conjunction with
the University Faculties involved, to decide a comprehensive programme of
key subjects involving all branches of medicine, thus taking the lead, with
the assistance of the professional rolls, in carrying out the programmes and
checking out the continuous update, branch by branch, on the part of the individual
doctors.
The pharmaceutical industry has so far played a leading role in organising
and sponsoring scientific meetings, congresses and conferences, emphasising
specific diseases, which, by sheer coincidence, related to their own industrial
field. On the other hand, in certain cases, the same molecule represents the
active principle of numerous drugs having the same composition, even if marketed
under different names; therefore often identical scientific meetings are organised
in connection with the pathology treated with that specific molecule, which
add in no way to the doctor’s knowledge. This is why it would be advisable
for the Ministry to accurately organise the continuous update of medical professionals,
without having to rely on the business requirements of the pharmaceutical
industry, by adopting a broader and more scientific approach to the entire
field, also from an organisational point of view.
(traduzione Interpres- Giussano)



