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Brazil is gaining its momentum in pharmaceutical development
Author(s) -
Ana Paula Ruenis,
João Massud Filho
Publication year - 2016
Publication title -
journal of medicines development sciences
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
eISSN - 2382-6371
pISSN - 2382-6363
DOI - 10.18063/jmds.2016.01.005
Subject(s) - bureaucracy , alliance , government (linguistics) , politics , political science , sustainability , pharmaceutical industry , business , economic growth , public administration , economics , medicine , law , ecology , philosophy , linguistics , pharmacology , biology
Brazil is one of the world´s largest economies and pharmaceutical markets, having the Brazilian government as an important purchaser. There are strong local companies that have grown sustainably after the introduction of generics and are investing in both incremental and radical innovation. However, research and development (RD this could be explained by a combination of economic and political uncertainty in the past few years and a bureaucratic, complex regulatory framework. New regulations, efforts to reduce ethical and regulatory review timelines, and a Senate bill aimed to accomplish that goal should constitute the definitive regulatory landmark for boosting clinical research. In addition to government investments they have given a breath of relief in the market, as Brazil is trying to, once again, gain momentum as a “must-go” country for clinical development. Non-profit associations such as the Brazilian Society of Pharmaceutical Medicine (Sociedade Brasileira de Medicina Farmaceutica-SBMF), the Brazilian Association of CROs (Associacao Brasileira de Organizacoes Representativas de Pesquisa Clinica-ABRACRO), the Brazilian Clinical Research Alliance (Alianca Pesquisa Clinica Brasil), amongst others, helped to give the impulse to trigger such changes. It is time to invest heavily in developing educational programs to address the growing need for clinical development scientists and physicians.

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