medicinal products
Before a medicine can be marketed in the Netherlands, it must
receive an authorisation (also called a marketing authorisation)
from the MEB. Authorised medicines are medicines approved by the
MEB. These medicines aelso carry risks or adverse effects.
The MEB determines whether the advantages of using the medicine
have been proven to outweigh the risks – the so-called
efficacy-safety balance. If the advantages outweigh the
disadvantages, the medicine receives marketing authorisation. The
MEB closely examines the efficacy, risks and quality of the
medicine.
All important information about the medicine is reproduced in the
detailed product information sheet for doctors and pharmacists
(summary of product characteristics, SPC). A summary for patients
is also made, in the form of a package leaflet. The MEB
evaluates both extensive product information and the
package leaflet. The MEB also decides on the product's legal
status (whether it can be obtained without prescription or may only
be dispensed on prescription). Once a medicine has been marketed,
the MEB continues to monitor the medicine
adverse event reports. It therefore always contains the most
up-to-date information about the efficacy and possible adverse
events of medicines. If necessary, the MEB can take steps like
modifying the package leaflet text or - in the most extreme case -
suspending sales or even withdrawing the medicine from the
market entirely.
A manufacturer can request marketing authorisation for a medicine
in one country or in several countries at the same time. To obtain
a
national marketing authorisation from the MEB, the manufacturer
follows a national recognition procedure or a
mutual recognition procedure. To obtain a European marketing
authorisation, the manufacturer follows a
decentralised or a
centralised procedure via the European Medicines Agency,
the EMA.