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Home / Health / Millions of Pregnant Women Denied Safe Medicine Info

Millions of Pregnant Women Denied Safe Medicine Info

13 Jan

•

Summary

  • Over 90% of medications lack pregnancy testing, leaving women with difficult choices.
  • WHO is initiating a major effort to improve drug testing protocols for pregnant women.
  • The Thalidomide tragedy in the 1950s-60s led to current, albeit flawed, drug safety regulations.
Millions of Pregnant Women Denied Safe Medicine Info

A significant gap exists in medical knowledge, leaving over 90% of medications untested in pregnancy. This forces millions of women worldwide into a difficult position: forgo essential treatments or take them with uncertain consequences for their babies. The World Health Organization is spearheading a generational change, initiating a collaborative effort with scientists, doctors, and drug developers to improve drug testing protocols for pregnant women.

The current situation is rooted in the Thalidomide scandal of the 1950s and 1960s, where a drug given for morning sickness caused severe birth defects. This led to stringent drug safety regulations but also created a climate of fear, systematically excluding pregnant women from trials. While modern scientific understanding allows for safer testing methodologies, the legacy of this tragedy continues to impact maternal healthcare, creating anxiety for both patients and providers.

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The WHO's initiative will focus on essential medicines for chronic diseases, developing guidelines for including pregnant women in trials safely. Similar to how testing for children became routine after EU regulations in 2007, the goal is to integrate pregnancy considerations from the earliest stages of drug development. This aims to shift the focus from solely risk to also include the benefits of safe and effective treatments for pregnant individuals and their unborn children.

Disclaimer: This story has been auto-aggregated and auto-summarised by a computer program. This story has not been edited or created by the Feedzop team.
Historical fears from the Thalidomide tragedy led to pregnant women being excluded from drug trials, creating a data gap for over 90% of medications.
The WHO is initiating a global collaboration to develop guidelines and encourage drug developers to safely test essential medicines in pregnant women.
The Thalidomide scandal led to modern drug safety regulations but also fostered fear, resulting in the continued exclusion of pregnant women from many trials.

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