« Bill Belichick Press Conference — How do you define pain? | Home | UnSuggester — Find the book least likely to share a library with any book you choose »

December 16, 2006

BehindTheMedspeak: 'If the web site shows no verifiable street address for the pharmacy, there is a 50% chance the drugs are counterfeit'

B0000e26zt01lzzzzzzzkkl

The headline above was the final sentence of the first paragraph of a December 12, 2006 New York Times editorial.

The next sentence read, "In rich countries, fake medicines mainly come from virtual stores."

Something to think about the next time you head north of the border (virtually speaking) to buy what you think are genuine medications for half the price you'd pay at Walgreens or CVS.

Assuming, that is, that you can still think after you've stroked out from uncontrolled hypertension resulting from the sugar pills you thought were your ACE inhibitor.

Here's the editorial in full.

    Fighting Drug Fakes

    Tempted to buy cheap medicines from a pharmacy Web site? Think twice. If the Web site shows no verifiable street address for the pharmacy, there is a 50 percent chance the drugs are counterfeit.

    In rich countries, fake medicines mainly come from virtual stores. Elsewhere, they are on the pharmacy shelves. In much of the former Soviet Union, 20 percent of the drugs on sale are fakes. In parts of Africa, Asia and Latin America, 30 percent are counterfeit. The culprits range from mom-and-pop operations processing chalk in their garages to organized-crime networks that buy the complicity of regulators, customs officials and pharmacists.

    In Panama, dozens of people died after taking counterfeit drugs made with an industrial solvent. Often counterfeiters put in real ingredients for their smell or taste, but heavily diluted. This has sped the emergence of resistant strains of infections, and is probably a big reason some malaria drugs and antibiotics have lost their power.

    Drug counterfeiting can be fought. Five years ago, the majority of Nigeria’s drugs were fakes, and the country was a major source of counterfeits abroad. When the Nigerian government donated 88,000 doses of meningitis vaccine to Niger during an epidemic in 1995, the vaccine turned out to be a fake — causing more than 2,500 children to die.

    Now the possibility that a drug is fake in Nigeria has dropped to 17 percent, according to the World Health Organization. The country’s drug control agency is informing people through radio and TV jingles about fake medicines. It has also fired corrupt officials, hired a fleet of inspectors to drop in on pharmacies, banned imports from some 30 companies, and begun prosecuting counterfeiters.

    One of the problems Nigeria still faces is that the penalty for counterfeiting medicine is as little as a $70 fine — a small price to pay for a crime that can reap a fortune. All over the developing world, governments treat falsifying medicines as a mere copyright infringement, rather than potential murder.

    The W.H.O. has recently set up a task force that brings together many groups that work on counterfeit drugs. It is a start. Multinational drug companies — which have been reluctant to report fakes lest they erode consumer confidence in all drugs — need to do more. An international convention is also needed to establish stiffer penalties for counterfeiting drugs, and marshal more funds and support to fight this deadly crime.

December 16, 2006 at 11:01 AM | Permalink


TrackBack

TrackBack URL for this entry:
https://www.typepad.com/services/trackback/6a00d8341c5dea53ef00d8353a4c5253ef

Listed below are links to weblogs that reference BehindTheMedspeak: 'If the web site shows no verifiable street address for the pharmacy, there is a 50% chance the drugs are counterfeit':

Comments

The comments to this entry are closed.