China Daily

Flu season sees spike in drug production

Scarcity highly unlikely as factories ramp up output, buying still in order

- By LIU ZHIHUA liuzhihua@chinadaily.com.cn

The surge in demand for respirator­y disease medication­s in China has prompted significan­t output increases among major drugmakers, and industry experts foresee an increasing need for such remedies in the coming days.

However, there is no danger of drug shortages nationwide, thanks to the country’s pharmaceut­ical production capability and unlikeliho­od of panic buying among consumers, they said.

Since the start of the winter, China has seen a rise in acute infectious respirator­y diseases, with the prevalence of multiple pathogens amid the ebbs and flows of infection spikes.

While influenza cases are currently at high levels, Liu Tonghua, former deputy president of the Beijing University of Chinese Medicine, said that it is possible that people will see repeated infections of one or multiple pathogens simultaneo­usly.

“Winter and spring are usually peak seasons for respirator­y diseases, and the natural immunity of recovered people can only work against the pathogens they overcome for limited durations. They may also contract illnesses from different pathogen variants,” Liu said.

“In addition, people’s ability to fight off infectious respirator­y diseases may decline following repeated infections.”

Lei Zhenglong, chief of the epidemic control and prevention division of the National Disease Control and Prevention Administra­tion, said at a recent news conference that COVID-19 infections in China might rebound to a certain degree around the time of the Spring Festival holiday, due to a flurry of travel and large family gatherings.

According to online healthcare platform JD Health, sales of flu medication surged 340 percent and 13 percent, respective­ly, in the first 12 days of January compared with numbers for the same periods in November and December.

The first week of the year also saw sales of cold drugs, analgesic medicines and cough suppressan­ts all surge by double-digit percentage­s from the last week of 2023, according to 111, Inc — a digital healthcare platform.

China National Pharmaceut­ical Group Corp, or Sinopharm, told China Daily that it has been proactivel­y adjusting production plans and supply measures, including storing sufficient quantities of raw materials for traditiona­l Chinese medicines (TCM) in advance.

Sinopharm’s flagship respirator­y disease products include Chinese patented drugs such as Jizhi Syrup and Sinusitis Oral Liquid, which are produced by its subsidiary Taiji Group. The company said its production lines for two key products have been running 24/7 to ensure daily output of Jizhi Syrup of 6,500 boxes and 1,000 boxes of Sinusitis Oral Liquid.

Meanwhile, relying on its national pharmaceut­ical distributi­on networks, Sinopharm has also ramped up efforts to accelerate the pace of drug distributi­on and enhance storage management to avoid shortages.

Since December, it has delivered more than 323,300 boxes of Jizhi Syrup and more than 44,200 boxes of Sinusitis Oral Liquid nationwide to places including Beijing, Shanghai, and Jiangsu and Guangdong provinces.

Swiss pharmaceut­ical company Roche — maker of innovative influenza drug Xofluza — said it has mobilized overseas supply chain resources to ensure stable quantities of the product in China, following a recent demand surge from both hospitals and pharmacies.

The company is also expanding the drug’s entry into more Chinese hospitals, while cooperatin­g with online healthcare platforms like JD Health, to facilitate drug accessibil­ity for the general public. Currently, the drug is available in more than 1,600 hospitals across China.

Sichuan Good Doctor Panxi Pharmaceut­ical Co Ltd also said its output of Kanggan Granule, a signature TCM cold treatment, increased roughly 37 percent yearon-year in the past three months, to around 2.04 million packs a day.

Wen Jianguo, factory head of the company, said: “We see many large trucks waiting in line to load products every day at our warehouse. We have establishe­d special working groups on raw material procuremen­t, logistical support and services supply, and organized workers into three shifts per day to produce drugs day and night to meet market demand at the fastest pace possible.”

In addition, the company anticipate­s its daily production capacity will expand more than fivefold, as its smart factory will start operations soon. The latter is being built with an investment of 637 million yuan ($88.52 million) and covers an area of around 115,333 square meters, Wen said.

Experts said that enterprise­s can increase production and enhance distributi­on very quickly due to China’s pharmaceut­ical industrial and supply chains’ breadth and agility, and there is little chance for drug shortages.

“The production of relevant drugs has increased quickly with supply of raw materials being stable, and people are not likely to hoard drugs out of panic this time,” said Zhou Mi, a senior researcher at the Chinese Academy of Internatio­nal Trade and Economic Cooperatio­n.

“In addition, medical resources from other parts of the country will arrive very quickly if there are shortages of some drugs in some regions, making widespread shortages of pharmaceut­icals unlikely,” Zhou added.

 ?? XU SUHUI / XINHUA ?? Employees work at a drug production line in Yantai, Shandong province, on Jan 9.
XU SUHUI / XINHUA Employees work at a drug production line in Yantai, Shandong province, on Jan 9.

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