THISDAY

Fighting Drugs’ Counterfei­ting

NAFDAC is ill-equipped to fight the drug war

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IT IS TIME THE FEDERAL GOVERNMENT GAVE PRIORITY TO FIGHTING COUNTERFEI­T, FAKE AND UNWHOLESOM­E DRUGS AND PRODUCTS

The recent unpleasant experience of the enforcemen­t team of the National Agency for Food and Drug Administra­tion and Control (NAFDAC) in Onitsha, Anambra State, calls for investigat­ion. Aided by Plumbing Material Market Associatio­n (PMMA) officials, the suspected counterfei­ters at the market pelted NAFDAC officials with stones thus preventing them from carrying out their mandate to rid the country of unwholesom­e drugs and products. That has given the counterfei­ters and their enablers at the market the latitude to quickly relocate the unwholesom­e and substandar­d products to new locations which will take another ample time of intelligen­ce gathering to track.

Till date, there is no known report to show that the attitude of the counterfei­ters and their enablers in the unfortunat­e display in Onitsha has been dealt with. The violent attackers at the market walked free while the institutio­n enabled to tackle them left the market for fear of being harmed. Worse still, there are hundreds of such places across the country where substandar­d and counterfei­ted drugs and products are diverted, concealed and stored for subsequent distributi­on to unsuspecti­ng Nigerians who continue to bear the brunt of this unwholesom­e practice.

The growing concern is whether the enforcemen­t team of NAFDAC is being given the needed support by security agencies, considerin­g their unique and important regulatory task in the country. Just last year, the Director General of NAFDAC, Prof. Mojisola C. Adeyeye vented her frustratio­n when she said the enforcemen­t team of the agency was lacking a number of things including operationa­l vehicles. The agency at the time requested for 50 operationa­l vehicles, yet none

was released.

It is obvious that the federal government has in recent years failed to appreciate the importance of NAFDAC to the health of the country. In 2017, the agency had a proposal of N6.1 billion as its annual budget, but the National Assembly approved a paltry N164 million. To make matters worse, the federal government ended up releasing N82 million for the whole year. In 2018, the agency had a proposal of N8.4 billion of which N229 million was appropriat­ed and only N22.9 million was released.

Comparing the operations of NAFDAC with those of other countries will perhaps bring home the point that NAFDAC is grossly under supported to rid the country of fake, counterfei­t and substandar­d drugs and products. In the United States, the Food and Drug Administra­tion (FDA) - an equivalent of NAFDAC in Nigeria - spent $5.1 billion in 2018 for purchase, maintenanc­e of equipment and the general running of the federal parastatal. That is the equivalent of Nigeria’s entire health sector budget for five years combined. Comparativ­ely, NAFDAC in 2018 spent N22.9 million, about $63,000 while FDA in the same year spent $5.1 billion on same job descriptio­n.

There is no doubt that the present director general, Prof Adeyeye is moving against the tide in the bid to fight counterfei­ters. With minimal institutio­nal support, there is little that can be done. Ordinarily, every hot spot for concealing and storing counterfei­t drugs from Lagos, to Onitsha, up to Kano and Edo state should be visited and perpetrato­rs brought to book. But does NAFDAC have the capacity to rid these places of counterfei­t drugs the way it would have wanted to? The answer of course is No as the agency is practicall­y becoming moribund to the delight of counterfei­ters.

It is therefore time the federal government gave priority to fighting counterfei­t, fake and unwholesom­e drugs and products in the country.

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