The Herald (South Africa)

Patients at risk due to chaotic state of drug depots

- Katharine Child

ALMOST half of state-run medicine depots are storing life-saving drugs inadequate­ly, risking patient safety and breaking the law by operating without a licence.

This sorry state of affairs came to light at a recent presentati­on to the parliament­ary portfolio committee on health by representa­tives of the auditor-general’s office.

The office was presenting the results of an audit of the handling of the medicines, valued at R16-billion, that the state buys each year.

The audit suggests that some patients are treated with ineffectiv­e medicines and that a fortune is being wasted on drugs that are not needed or have passed their expiry date.

Four of the 10 state medicine depots do not qualify for the Medicines Control Council licence they need to operate legally.

The four depots applied for licences but were turned down because they had inadequate storage facilities.

The poor storage practices included boxes of medicine being exposed to the sun because there were no blinds on the windows. Sunlight can destroy some antibiotic­s and vitamins.

In one instance, a KwaZulu-Natal storeroom was found to have a temperatur­e of 34°C, 9°C higher than the internatio­nally recognised maximum of 25°C for the storage of medicine.

“This makes the effectiven­ess of these medicines questionab­le,” the auditor-general’s report said.

Recordings of temperatur­e should be made every few hours in refrigerat­ed rooms, but a register of the temperatur­es recorded in a cold room in the Free State depot had not been updated between August 2010 and May 2013.

Poor security at depots led to the theft of drugs. At one depot a wheelbarro­w had been used as an improvised door.

Because of a lack of stock control, provinces could not say which medicines had been stolen, or quantify the thefts.

The auditor-general found that some depots had no security camera, or the camera systems did not work.

The registrar of the Medicines Control Council, Joey Gouws, would not say why four depots had not been licenced.

“The Medicines Control Council is in continuous discussion­s with the identified state depots to try to guide them on the requiremen­ts to reach compliance status,” Gouws said.

DA health spokesman Wilmot James said he was worried about the health implicatio­ns of medicine depots operating illegally.

“The Medicines Control Council has strict compliance requiremen­ts for the storage and distributi­on of medicines, including refrigerat­ion, and the monitoring of expiration dates. The lack of registrati­on poses a risk.”

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