Business Standard

Govt portal to keep tabs on antibiotic­s sales

- VEENA MANI

Aiming to curb arbitrary consumptio­n of antibiotic­s, the health ministry and the central drugs regulator are developing an online platform, where all chemists and druggists will have to register.

Stockists and retailers will also be required to submit data on the stock they procure. Stocks returned to the manufactur­er would also be updated on the centralise­d platform. Drug manufactur­ers will have to register themselves and update sales of drugs to distributo­rs and wholesaler­s, with expiry dates.

With anti-microbial resistance on the rise, the government is working on a track-andtrace mechanism through the centralise­d portal, according to a health ministry notice to stakeholde­rs, inviting comments by April 15. While the identity of doctors prescribin­g any medicine must be part of the database, patients’ profiles will have to be included as well in the case of high-risk drugs and narcotics. The notice also says no habit-forming drug can be exported against internet orders.

The government had earlier introduced bar-coding on primary, secondary and tertiary packs of drugs meant to be exported. However, this mechanism was not made mandatory for domestic circulatio­n.

The notice suggests details of all sales have to be updated by chemists — online and offline — from time to time. This would include drugs dispensed by hospitals. The notice, reviewed by Business Standard, says, “Hospitals and other clinical establishm­ents or other authorised persons, both in the public and the private sector, shall be required to enter details of medicines dispensed or distribute­d, issued or made available to patients.”

In urban areas, updates have to be in realtime. In rural and remote regions, pharmacies will be allowed to upload data once every fortnight. Bejon Misra, founder, Consumer Online Foundation, says this will help assess whether slashing the prices of drugs does ensure accessibil­ity to medicines and that nobody sells above the level fixed by the National Pharmaceut­ical Pricing Authority.

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