WHO model formulary for children 2010

Overview
In developing the WHO Model Formulary for Children, the editors have based decisions on treatment regimens on the best available evidence from clinical studies in children, that have been assessed and evaluated by the WHO Expert Committee on Selection and Use of Essential Medicines. However, as has been found by all authorities in relation to medicines for children, in many cases the recommendations on dose and duration of treatment in children have to be extrapolated from studies in adults and adjusted based on our understanding of the effect of age and development on the absorption, distribution and metabolism and excretion of different medicines in children of different ages. One of the aims of this publication is therefore not only to describe what is known about treatments, but to highlight where more research is needed.
In 2007, the World Health Assembly passed a Resolution titled ‘Better Medicines for Children’. This resolution recognized the need for research and development into medicines for children, including better dosage forms, better evidence and better information about how to ensure that medicines for treating the common childhood diseases are given at the right dose for children of all ages. The World Health Organization has therefore developed a program of work on medicines for children, including the development of a Model List of Essential Medicines for children (EMLc). As an extra resource for health-care workers and national programmes that supply medicines for children, this new edition of the WHO Model Formulary has been prepared, based on the 2nd edition of the EMLc, to provide prescribers with the best information about how to use the medicines included on the List.An electronic version of the WHO Formulary for Children is also available, intended as a starting
point for developing institutional or national formularies. The text of the Formulary can be used by
groups who wish to develop their own version, by adapting the text or by adding or deleting entries
to align the formulary to their own list of essential medicines.
This edition of the WHO Model Formulary is fully compatible with the 2nd List of Essential
Medicines for Children, as recommended by the WHO Expert Committee on the Selection and Use
of Essential Medicines in March 2009.