Deccan Chronicle

Severe shortage of Covid-19 drugs hampers speedy cure

- DC CORRESPOND­ENT

Severe shortage of Covid19 medicines has turned out to be a big worry for those who are affected with the pandemic and the medical fraternity which extends treatment to them, apart from the healthcare department.

Imported medicines like tocilizuma­b are under the state government regulation­s which makes procuremen­t possible only after the approval from the state committee.

A patient requiring this medicine will have to wait for at least 24 hours till the process of procuremen­t is completed. In a recent case of a 45-year-old patient requiring this medicine, doctors had to put up a note on social media through which the distributo­r company officials contacted them. After that there was e-mail interactio­n of exact status and need for medicine evaluated. Medical papers and status of patients on the day of applicatio­n were submitted and put before the state government committee. After it was scrutinise­d, medicine was supplied by a distributo­r to the hospital only.

A senior doctor who is treating the case stated, “It is a time-consuming procedure and during the nonpeak times of Covid-19, at least these must be expedited. To procure the medicine, we had to take the help of social media and only after that the process started. What does this mean?”

Doctors who have been circulatin­g various messages of requiremen­ts state that this has now become a common practice as the ‘genuinenes­s’ is validated only on social media.

M Chandrashe­kar, drug inspector at the Telangana Drug Controller says, “This is an imported medicine and there are limited stocks allocated to states. If there is a requiremen­t, hospitals have to directly approach the distributo­r who will explain and also facilitate the procedure and also procuremen­t of the medicine. This medicine is now not available on retail counters.”

The biggest worry for health and drug control administra­tion is blackmarke­ting of medicines. For this reason, they are not de-regulating it. Dr Ramesh Reddy, director of medical education says, “These biological drugs have to be monitored and cannot be given to everyone. We evaluate whether the patient really requires it and then sanction the medicine. It must also be noted that this is one way in which hoarding of these important drugs can be controlled.”

Presently, the stocks in every state are monitored by Central agencies as there has been severe shortage of Covid 19 medicines during the second wave. For this reason, company distributo­rs and stock points in different parts of the state are monitoring every batch of medicine and its dispatch is recorded.

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