The Borneo Post

WHO plays down risk to Indian children from tainted polio vaccine

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MUMBAI: The World Health Organisati­on ( WHO) said on Monday that there was minimal risk of children contractin­g the polio virus in India from a tainted batch of vaccines.

The public health scare, which potentiall­y affected thousands of children, put a renewed spotlight on lax pharmaceut­ical quality control procedures in India.

The latest concerns emerged over the weekend after vaccines produced by privately-held BioMed Pvt Ltd and distribute­d as part of a free government drive to eradicate polio were found to have a strain of the virus that had been eradicated around the world and phased out of vaccines.

However Shamila Sharma, a spokeswoma­n for the WHO, said any risk to children was “minimal” due to the high routine polio immunisati­on coverage in India. The WHO funds and supports India’s polio- control programme.

Health officials in New Delhi said they were investigat­ing why and how Bio-Med was still producing such vaccines, and that the affected lots were being recalled. The Indian government had ordered this type of vaccine to be discontinu­ed in 2016.

Local media reported on the weekend that police arrested the managing director of the northern India-based Bio-Med Pvt Ltd, after routine testing revealed it had made and shipped some 150,000 lots of oral polio vaccines that contained the type 2 polio vaccine virus.

India, often dubbed the pharmacy of the world, is home to thousands of factories churning out drugs and vaccines for sale globally, but local regulation is lax. In recent years, US and European regulators have slammed many Indian drug factories for faulty manufactur­ing practices, often issuing warnings or bans.

“We don’t have good quality control mechanisms,” said Oommen Kurian, a health researcher at New Delhi- based Observer Research Foundation, adding the country also doesn’t have the capacity to implement regulation.

Bio-Med and India’s top drugs regulator, the Central Drug Standard Control Organisati­on, did not respond to requests for comment on Monday.

Some batches of typhoid vaccines produced by Bio- Med were also found to be “not- of standard quality” by the CDSCO earlier this year, according to a public notice by the agency dated March 14, 2018. — Reuters

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