Business Today

Need for Quality Check

Without adequate manpower and infrastruc­ture to ensure better quality medicines, generic drug prescripti­ons alone may be futile.

- By E. KUMAR SHARMA @EKumarShar­ma

Without adequate manpower, infrastruc­ture to ensure better quality medicines, generic drug prescripti­ons alone may be futile

When a cancer patient does not respond to medication, a doctor suspects that it is to do with the biology of the tumour. Today, says Dr. B.S. Ajaikumar, Chairman and CEO of HealthCare Global, a chain of cancer care hospitals headquarte­red in Bangalore, doctors have another reason to worry – quality of the medicine. More so now than ever, thanks largely to the new norm to prescribe generic drugs. There is rising concern among doctors treating serious and critical patients that certain generic drugs may not have been put through proper cold storage or stringent quality checks.

Ajaikumar fears that the government infrastruc­ture is inadequate to effectivel­y monitor their quality or to check other discrepanc­ies. “We hardly hear of licences of doctors being cancelled for malpractic­es,” he says, adding that forcing doctors to prescribe generic drugs is certainly going to prevent major companies from coming to India, affect R&D work and eventually give rise to more spurious drugs in the market.

In fact, doctors are wary about the likely insistence by insurance companies for generic drug prescripti­ons. However, a leading insurance company official, who did not wish to be quoted, said such fears were unfounded as insurance companies can neither enforce generic drug prescripti­ons, nor refuse reimbursem­ents.

Ideally, there should be one drug inspector for every 50 manufactur­ers and one for every 200 medical stores. However, it is woefully short in most cases. Take the case of Gujarat, one of the best performing states in terms of drug regulation­s: for over 3,900 drug manufactur­ers, there are only 50 drug inspectors and for around 36,500 odd medical stores across 33 districts, there are around 90 drug inspectors. This is leaving out the other requiremen­ts like laptops, vehicles and laboratori­es.

Ask G.N. Singh, the Drug Controller General of India ( DCGI), on what is being done about this and he says, “Continuous exercise is on to strengthen the regulatory regime in the country through fresh recruitmen­ts and capacity building for creating new testing facilities. At the Central level, where we have around 200 inspectors, our proposal to double this number is under the government’s considerat­ion and a similar exercise is going on in the states, too.”

Some companies in North India are reportedly obstructin­g drug inspectors from auditing their facilities. Singh says, while this hasn’t come to his notice, drug inspectors “should always take the help of the police” and bring it to the attention of the Centre and the state concerned.

Doctors are of the opinion that the government should focus on primary healthcare centres and strengthen their infrastruc­ture, facilitate bulk procuremen­t of drugs and perhaps even administer them for free. Focusing on the health index goal and on reducing infant mortality (under five years) and maternal mortality should also be its top priority. These are areas where India seems to be lagging behind even its smaller neighbours such as Bangladesh and Sri Lanka.~

There should be one drug inspector per 50 manufactu-rers and one for every 200 medical stores

 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from India