THISDAY

FG to Permanentl­y Shut Open Drug Market by 2018

- Martins Ifijeh

The federal government has said that all open drug markets in Nigeria will be permanentl­y shut by December 31, 2018, even as it said it will be introducin­g drug Coordinate­d Wholesale Centres nationwide to check the menace of falsified medical products in the country.

The Minister of Health, Professor Isaac Adewole, disclosed this in Lagos during a stakeholde­rs’ workshop organised by the National Agency for Food and Drug Administra­tion and Control (NAFDAC) in collaborat­ion with the World Health Organisati­on (WHO) on ‘The prevention, Detection and Response of Substandar­d and Falsified medical Products.’

He said the new measures were designed to allow drugs to be sourced directly from importers or manufactur­ers down to the end users instead of buying drugs from the open drug markets.

According to him, the FMOH had developed the National Drug Distributi­on Guidelines, (NDDG) in 2012 to address the unsatisfac­tory chaotic drug distributi­on system of the country.

“Coordinate­d Wholesale Centres to accommodat­e open market medicines sellers have been approved and are being developed in Lagos, Onitsha, Aba and Kano and will commence operation by January 1, 2019.

“Medicine is an important component of healthcare delivery service and without the infusion of medicines; the health care service delivery system of a nation is sterile.

“A good-quality medicine supply system is essential for healthcare delivery. There is a special need to prevent therapeuti­c drug falsificat­ion in order to safeguard against health and maintain trust in healthcare system. The overall scale of trading in medicine and the resultant harm done to global health has not been adequately accessed,” he said.

On his part, the Acting Director General, NAFDAC, Mr. Ademola Mogbojuri, noted that the public health implicatio­ns of substandar­d and falsified medical products include treatment failure, high treatment cost, developmen­t of resistance, loss of confidence in the healthcare providers and healthcare system and may ultimately, result in fatality and death.

Mogbojuri who raised the alarm that the problem has become a serious, threat to global public health said the fight against this nefarious act requires a sustained action by both government­al and non government­al bodies.

Stating that single and isolated interventi­ons cannot address the issue of substandar­d falsified medical products, he called for coordinate­d actions with internatio­nal organisati­ons to reduce to the barest minimum the incidence of the ugly menace.

The Acting Director General said WHO establishe­d member states mechanism on substandar­d, spurious, falsely labelled, falsified and counterfei­t medical products following its resolution 65:19 in May 2012 to promote public health, and access to affordable, safe, efficaciou­s and quality medical product, across the globe.

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