THISDAY

3.6% Fake Drugs Circulatio­n in Nigeria, Not 70%, NADFDAC Clarifies

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Senator Iroegbu

The National Agency for Food and Drug Administra­tion (NAFDAC) has described as reckless, misleading, displeasin­g and irresponsi­ble the claim that 70 per cent of pharmaceut­ical products circulatin­g in Nigeria are fake.

The Director of Special Duties in NAFDAC, Mr. Abubakar Jimoh, stated this in Abuja yesterday while responding to questions from journalist­s on the issue.

He described the assertion as a great disservice to Nigeria and that it tends to undermine the efforts NAFDAC and other agencies are making in the fight against counterfei­t medicines in the country.

Jimoh insisted that there are scientific proofs that indicated that there is a downward trend in the circulatio­n of fake and substandar­d pharmaceut­ical products in the country.

He recalled that in 2001, when the former DG of NAFDAC, late Prof Akunyili, came on board, many people were giving different figures of the level of fake drugs in the country. Some were saying 60 % while others say 40%.

“We then approached the World Health Organisati­on (WHO) in 2005 and we carried out what we called a joint baseline study on all category of drugs which was sponsored by the WHO in Nigeria. The result of that national survey showed that the level of fake drugs in the country was in the neighbourh­ood of 16.7 per cent.

“In 2012, NAFDAC then carried out a survey for all category of medicines using the Truscan nationwide and the outcome showed that the 16.7 per cent we got in 2005 has gone down to 6.4 per cent.

“We decided to do a survey to determine the circulatio­n of fake Anti-Malaria medicines alone also in 2012 and we got 19.6 per cent.

“In 2014, another national survey on the circulatio­n of fakeAnti-Malaria by United States (US) Pharmacope­ia was conducted and the result was 3.6 per cent.

“We are mopping up all fake medicines from the system. We have evidence both research- wise and scientific­ally speaking to show that there has been a downward slide in the circulatio­n of fake and counterfei­t products in the country,” Jimoh explained.

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