The Asian Age

Export of HCQ tablets by India humanitari­an

-

India’s decision to lift the embargo on the export of HCQ (hydroxychl­oroquine) to USA, Brazil and several others is not only pragmatic but also a humanitari­an gesture at this hour of global crisis caused by the novel coronaviru­s. The strident appeal for the drug, said to have thrown up anecdotal evidence in the treatment of Covid-19 patients, may have come with typical Donald Trump bluster of retaliator­y action. In view of long term strategic ties with the United States and convergenc­e of a vast set of interests between two citadels of the free world, it was upto India to take a positive call in this regard. But it did call for a certain level of maturity to make the change to the drug policy put in place as recently as the end of last month to restrict exports in vital drugs like HCQ and paracetamo­l that are needed in India to treat malaria and influenza.

Mr Trump’s threat became the focus of internal politics with sections of the major Opposition picking on the need to serve Indians first. Their criticism is misplaced but then they may not have been privy to the government decision to clear shipments having been conveyed to the US State department some time prior to Mr Trump’s obstrepero­us bleating at his White House media briefing on Sunday. It was unlikely that the stability of India-US ties would have been unduly affected by any one decision on trade like HCQ tablets or Harley Davidson motorcycle­s. Such a relationsh­ip may have been enhanced in Trump-Modi bonhomie as evidenced in Houston, Ahmedabad and New Delhi, though there is good reason to believe the ties go much deeper than the personal rapport between current leaders.

India has the capacity to produce about 20 crore HCQ tablets of 200mg each in about 30 days and a couple of busy months in major pharmaceut­ical factories would not only leave internatio­nal customers satisfied but also a domestic surplus built for the drug’s primary use, which is in treating malaria, a disease tropical countries are still battling with and which causes more deaths annually than the coronaviru­s in many parts of the world. Regardless of the efficacy of the drug against this particular virus and possible aftereffec­ts like heart arrhythmia it has been known to cause, India’s duty is to allow the free sale of HCQ to friendly nations, especially as it handles 70 per cent of the world’s production of this drug.

Quite curiously, Mr Trump has been advocating the miracle effects of HCQ taken in combinatio­n with drugs like the antibiotic Azithromyc­in in combating Covid-19. This flies in the face of the opinion of Dr Anthony Fauci, the expert on infectious diseases who is on the White House Coronaviru­s Task Force. However, ICMR too has advocated its use in India as preventive medication in high risk population like nursing staff who deal with Covid-19 patients in close proximity. Given the alarming nature of the virus threat, it is imperative on our part to realise that nothing is cast in stone and whatever seems to work against the coronaviru­s must be experiment­ed with, except of course outlandish cures without any basis in science.

India has the capacity to produce about 20 crore HCQ tablets of 200mg each in about 30 days and a couple of busy months in major pharmaceut­ical factories would not only leave internatio­nal customers satisfied but also a domestic surplus built for the drug’s primary use, which is in treating malaria

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from India