The Asian Age

Plan to ban single-use plastic creates chaos in medical device cos

- KANIZA GARARI

The rule of single-use plastic has created confusion among the manufactur­ers, traders and the endconsume­r as apart from the carry bags there are innumerabl­e products, devices and utilities which are dependent on plastic packaging. With the October 2 deadline set, those in the medical device industry are clueless as to what is the plastic that they must discard.

Mr Ramesh Gupta of the All India Druggists and Chemists Associatio­n in Hyderabad explained, “We can stop giving the medicines to the end user in plastic carry bag but what about the plastic bottles which are used for storage and supply of medicines? There are not enough glass manufactur­ers and to replace the complete system will be quite a Herculean task.”

In the recent seasonal diseases which have struck Hyderabad there have been four lakh bottles of cough syrup which were sold in the city. This combinatio­n is supplied based on the demand in plastic bottles only.

The manufactur­ers keep the stock for the seasonal diseases whose production of plastic bottles begins six months in advance.

Similarly, the device manufactur­ing companies have to pack products like needles, syringes, IV fluids, blood bags for transfusio­n, cathethers and many other devices in plastic which are in the single-use category.

These are the highest in use in the medical industry and also the largest waste generators. Mr Sunil Suwarna, a medical device trader explained, “The industry wants a structured phasing out of single-use plastic devices. This would mean that there is a breather for now. But the manufactur­ers who have large units have to change the processes and systems. This is a move which would require a lot of investment and also raw material.”

At present, the recyclable plastic products with certificat­ion and verificati­on of safety are being used and to switch to other bioabsorba­le materials would require a lot of research.

A case in the point is the use of stents in heart diseases which is made from a combinatio­n of plastic and has proved effective.

The trials on bioabsorab­le plastic were not found to be safe and require a lot of research.

With the huge demands among the population in India and the growing healthcare demand, the medical device industry is finding itself in a tricky situation. An Indian manufactur­er of needles in Hyderabad explained, “Every month, the supply from my unit is one lakh needles. These are packed in plastic which comes under singleuse category. If the shift occurs, the safety, fear of contaminat­ion and ability to sterilise the new package will be the priority. If these demands are not met the end-use of the product is not safe. Hence the government has to come out clearly with an alternativ­e first before talking in generic terms of singleuse plastic.”

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