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Adverse Drug Reaction

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What would you it meant to you if a disease or an allergic reaction could have been prevented if there were more test in a health care system that could have saved millions of patient’s lives? What if the allergic reaction could easily have avoided if there were a procedure and policy taken place in the health care system? By a mislabeling test specimen which includes a system that should have been added as a policy has failed at a high rate of patients that to this day there are working on making it an existing policy. That type of mislabeling test specimen that I'm talking is called Adverse drug reaction. A new policy on adverse drug reaction (ADR) which it can be tested on patients to see if they carry ADR by determine in which gene …show more content…

It’s a violated policy for mislabeling test specimen for ADR which, “claim anywhere between 10,000 and 22,000 lives in Canada every year” (Genome British Columbia, 2016, para.4) especially for the fact that it can “lead to body mal-function, hospitalization, disability, life-threatening injuries and death” (Yulina,2017, para.17).
The policy over genetic test has never been enforced in the health care in Canada, however, there should be a policy made for taking a genetic test to determine if you have an allergic reaction to the new drug. Amani Saini proclaims, “that the disease could have possibly been prevented if her sister has been tested to see if she was carrying the gene variant” (Yuliya, 2017, para.28). There were studied on how our genes affect our responses to drugs, as for example, the Stevens Johnson Syndrome (SJS) in which your body feel under attack only in which “[it is caused by an] overreaction of the patient’s immune system to the drug” (Mackenzie,2015, para. 4) so, the only solution was to simply stop using the drugs knowns to cause SJS, but only a small portion would have a negative impact of the drug which it won’t be beneficial to take them off the market. Lastly, the solution was invented, by having a wallet-sized card which it’s a genetic ID card “[It] will tell physicians that the patient has a particular genetic composition and what drug they should avoid prescribing for that patient. It has the advantage the patient can carry the information in

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