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Purpose
Pharmacovigilance is defined by the World Health Organization as the science and activity related to detecting, assessing, understanding and preventing adverse effects and other medicine-related problems. The Therapeutic Goods Administration (TGA) conducts a range of pharmacovigilance activities to monitor the safety and efficacy of medicines in Australia and, where necessary, take appropriate action.
The pharmacovigilance responsibilities of sponsors of medicines included on the Australian Register of Therapeutic Goods (ARTG) and regulated by the TGA are set out in the Pharmacovigilance responsibilities of medicine sponsors—Australian recommendations and requirements.
The TGA inspects Australian sponsors to assess whether they are meeting their pharmacovigilance responsibilities.
This guidance will help you understand our pharmacovigilance inspection program (PVIP). It outlines how we prepare, conduct, report and follow up pharmacovigilance inspections and lists the criteria we use when scheduling inspections.
In this guidance, we use ‘must’ or ‘required’ to describe something you are legally obliged to do. We use ‘should’ to recommend an action that will assist you to meet your legal requirements. We refer to the TGA as ‘we’ or ‘us’, and to sponsors as ‘you’.
This guidance describes:
- how we prioritise and schedule pharmacovigilance inspections
- the kinds of inspections we might make and the inspection process
- the legal basis for pharmacovigilance inspections of all sponsors of medicines on the ARTG.