Skip to contentMCQ on Rational Drug Use and Pharmacovigilance
π’ Easy (1β20)
- What does Rational Drug Use (RDU) mean?
a) Prescribing the most expensive drugs
b) Using antibiotics in all conditions
c) Using the right drug, dose, and duration β
d) Letting patients choose their own drugs
Explanation: RDU ensures appropriate therapy based on clinical needs. - Which organization promotes Rational Drug Use globally?
a) UNESCO
b) WHO β
c) FAO
d) ILO
Explanation: WHO advocates for rational and safe use of medicines. - Pharmacovigilance mainly deals with:
a) Clinical diagnosis
b) Monitoring adverse drug reactions β
c) Drug pricing
d) Drug manufacturing
Explanation: Pharmacovigilance focuses on drug safety after approval. - An Adverse Drug Reaction (ADR) is:
a) A drug marketing technique
b) A desired therapeutic effect
c) A harmful or unintended drug response β
d) A placebo effect
Explanation: ADRs are harmful, unintended responses to normal doses. - Which term means overuse or misuse of antibiotics?
a) Rational use
b) Antimicrobial resistance β
c) Pharmacogenomics
d) Pharmacokinetics
Explanation: Overuse of antibiotics leads to drug resistance. - Who can report an ADR?
a) Only doctors
b) Only pharmacists
c) Only patients
d) Any healthcare professional or patient β
Explanation: All stakeholders in healthcare can report ADRs. - What is the purpose of an Essential Medicines List (EML)?
a) For emergency storage
b) To confuse prescribers
c) To promote rational prescribing β
d) For advertisement
Explanation: EML guides the use of cost-effective and essential drugs. - The first country to implement pharmacovigilance was:
a) India
b) Sweden β
c) USA
d) China
Explanation: Sweden initiated the first structured pharmacovigilance program. - Which tool helps monitor RDU in healthcare settings?
a) Blood test
b) Drug utilization studies β
c) Vital signs
d) CT scan
Explanation: These studies analyze patterns in prescribing and usage. - Which is an irrational drug use example?
a) Prescribing antibiotics for viral infections β
b) Giving paracetamol for fever
c) Antihypertensives for high BP
d) Antacids for gastritis
Explanation: Antibiotics are ineffective against viruses. - Which of the following is NOT an objective of RDU?
a) Cost-effectiveness
b) Safety
c) Promoting branded drugs β
d) Efficacy
Explanation: RDU aims at generic, safe, and effective drug use. - Which Indian body is responsible for pharmacovigilance?
a) AIIMS
b) IPC β
c) ICMR
d) CSIR
Explanation: Indian Pharmacopoeia Commission coordinates PvPI. - What is the full form of PvPI?
a) Pharmaceutical Vigilance Program of India
b) Pharmacovigilance Program of India β
c) Pharmacology Vigilant Institute
d) Pharmacy Vaccine Policy India
Explanation: PvPI monitors drug safety nationwide in India. - The Yellow Card Scheme is associated with:
a) India
b) Australia
c) UK β
d) USA
Explanation: The UK uses this system to collect ADR reports. - Which is a non-serious ADR?
a) Death
b) Hospitalization
c) Nausea β
d) Congenital anomaly
Explanation: Nausea is common and typically not life-threatening. - Which of these enhances rational prescribing?
a) Gifts from pharma companies
b) Continuing medical education β
c) Peer pressure
d) Advertisements
Explanation: Education keeps prescribers updated on best practices. - What type of drug use is common in irrational prescribing?
a) Polypharmacy β
b) Monotherapy
c) Herbal therapy
d) Nutritional supplements
Explanation: Using multiple drugs unnecessarily increases risks. - The first step in ADR management is:
a) Continue the drug
b) Ignore symptoms
c) Stop or adjust the offending drug β
d) Prescribe antibiotics
Explanation: Removing the suspected drug prevents further harm. - Which is a signal in pharmacovigilance?
a) A clinical trial result
b) A consistent trend in ADR reports β
c) Marketing message
d) Patient refusal
Explanation: A signal indicates a potential new drug safety issue. - ADR reporting in India is done via:
a) ADR Gazette
b) VigiFlow software β
c) Medline
d) News articles
Explanation: VigiFlow is the WHO-recommended ADR database.
π‘ Moderate (21β40)
- Which class of drugs often causes hypersensitivity reactions?
a) Vitamins
b) Antibiotics β
c) Sedatives
d) Antacids
Explanation: Penicillins and other antibiotics can trigger allergic responses. - Polypharmacy increases the risk of:
a) Rapid recovery
b) ADRs and drug interactions β
c) Compliance
d) Cost reduction
Explanation: More drugs = more chances of unwanted interactions. - Which ADR type is dose-dependent and predictable?
a) Type A β
b) Type B
c) Type C
d) Type D
Explanation: Type A reactions are related to known drug actions. - Which of the following promotes rational use?
a) Generic prescribing β
b) Brand loyalty
c) Pharmaceutical marketing
d) Patient self-medication
Explanation: Generics are cheaper and equally effective. - Which drug class requires close therapeutic monitoring?
a) Vitamins
b) Anticoagulants β
c) Antacids
d) Laxatives
Explanation: Anticoagulants like warfarin have a narrow safety margin. - What is the main purpose of pharmacovigilance centers?
a) Drug sale
b) Drug trial
c) ADR detection and reporting β
d) Pharmacy marketing
Explanation: These centers ensure ongoing drug safety surveillance. - Over-the-counter (OTC) drug misuse can result in:
a) Improved health
b) Controlled therapy
c) Serious ADRs β
d) Reduced costs
Explanation: Unmonitored use increases risks. - What is a spontaneous ADR report?
a) From a lab test
b) Proactively collected data
c) Voluntary report by healthcare provider β
d) Report from clinical trial
Explanation: These are unsolicited reports sent to authorities. - Which drug class is known for causing nephrotoxicity?
a) NSAIDs β
b) Antacids
c) Antiemetics
d) Laxatives
Explanation: NSAIDs can impair renal function. - Pharmacovigilance helps identify:
a) Expensive drugs
b) Ineffective marketing
c) Rare and delayed ADRs β
d) Patient food preferences
Explanation: Post-marketing surveillance reveals rare side effects. - Signal detection in pharmacovigilance involves:
a) Coding errors
b) Sales monitoring
c) Statistical review of ADR data β
d) Internet surfing
Explanation: Trends in large data sets can highlight hidden risks. - Which is a challenge in rational drug use?
a) Electronic prescribing
b) Drug shortages
c) Lack of updated knowledge β
d) Clinical guidelines
Explanation: Outdated or poor knowledge leads to poor choices. - The ideal prescription contains:
a) Drug name and cost
b) Drug name, dose, frequency, duration β
c) Brand name only
d) Patient gender only
Explanation: Complete details ensure safe administration. - Which of the following is a pharmacovigilance activity?
a) Drug promotion
b) Dose calculation
c) Risk-benefit assessment of drugs β
d) Therapy selection
Explanation: Safety evaluation is central to pharmacovigilance. - Which government body oversees drug approval and PvPI in India?
a) NABH
b) CDSCO β
c) FSSAI
d) NPCI
Explanation: CDSCO regulates safety and efficacy of medicines. - How often should prescribers be trained on RDU?
a) Once in a lifetime
b) Yearly β
c) Every decade
d) Never
Explanation: Frequent updates promote rational practice. - Which is a key indicator of irrational use?
a) Generic prescriptions
b) Use of fixed-dose combinations unnecessarily β
c) Use of EML
d) Use of dosage forms
Explanation: Many FDCs are unnecessary and risky. - Which drug needs patient-specific monitoring?
a) Paracetamol
b) Digoxin β
c) Vitamin C
d) Ibuprofen
Explanation: Digoxin has a narrow therapeutic index. - What is the first step in signal management?
a) Public announcement
b) Signal detection β
c) Product withdrawal
d) Clinical trial
Explanation: Identifying a potential issue starts the process. - Which country manages VigiBase for WHO?
a) India
b) USA
c) Sweden β
d) Germany
Explanation: Uppsala Monitoring Centre in Sweden manages VigiBase.
π΄ Hard (41β50)
- What is causality assessment in pharmacovigilance?
a) Cost analysis
b) Identifying counterfeit drugs
c) Establishing drug-event relationship β
d) Labeling errors
Explanation: It links a drug to an ADR scientifically. - Which is a structured causality assessment method?
a) Venn diagram
b) Naranjo algorithm β
c) ADR card
d) Pie chart
Explanation: Naranjo algorithm quantifies likelihood of ADRs. - A Type B ADR is:
a) Predictable
b) Dose-dependent
c) Unpredictable and rare β
d) Common
Explanation: Type B is bizarre, not related to dose. - Pharmacovigilance planning is mandatory during:
a) Clinical trials phase I
b) Pre-marketing phase
c) New drug application submission β
d) Drug manufacturing
Explanation: Authorities require safety plans before approval. - A black triangle symbol on medicine indicates:
a) Banned drug
b) High price
c) Newly approved and under additional monitoring β
d) OTC product
Explanation: It’s used in the UK to signal new drugs. - Which is not an expected ADR?
a) From known drug label
b) From product leaflet
c) From patient history
d) Not listed in official sources β
Explanation: Unexpected ADRs arenβt in product info. - Pharmacovigilance differs from pharmacoepidemiology in:
a) Data collection method β
b) Drug type
c) Dosage form
d) Route of administration
Explanation: Pv focuses on individual case reports, while epidemiology uses population data. - Which is a limitation of spontaneous reporting?
a) Too many reports
b) Timely detection
c) Underreporting β
d) Free reporting
Explanation: Many ADRs go unreported. - Which tool is used in India to report ADRs digitally?
a) Medsafe
b) SUGAM
c) PvPI mobile app β
d) DIGIhealth
Explanation: The app facilitates easy ADR submission. - Which of these indicates a good RDU policy in hospitals?
a) Drug advertisement policy
b) Formulary based prescribing β
c) Free samples
d) Stock clearance sales
Explanation: Formulary systems promote evidence-based drug use.