Stabroek News

Food & Drugs Dep’t virtually helpless ...

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patient informatio­n leaflet must be stated in English language on all finished product packages.” The requiremen­t is attended by a threat that all drugs (prescripti­on and over the counter) that are labelled in a foreign language will be seized and removed from premises.”

But the source told Stabroek Business that “at least up to this time” the declaratio­n by the GAFDD “amounts to no more than huffing and puffing,” a condition which he says will remain unchanged “until it has the authority and the resources” to enforce those stipulatio­ns.

Charging that there are “numerous instances” in which the GAFDD is “none the wiser” regarding whether or not the drugs imported into Guyana are “fake or otherwise,” the source said that the problem facing the Department is that “its mandate extends way beyond its capabiliti­es...It really makes little sense to lay down stipulatio­ns and threaten sanctions if you do not have the reach to access much of the drugs that are coming in under the radar and which really ought to be the target of your operations.” “What I am saying,” he added, “is that the Food and Drug Department has to be given sturdier tools besides the public statements that they make if their enforcemen­t powers are to be respected. The reality is that the Department is not ideally equipped to make good the threats that they make about seizures and other forms of sanction because, as far as I am aware they have neither the manpower nor the authority to do what needs to be done.”

There are, according to the source, two considerat­ions that impact negatively on the ability of the Food and Drug Department to carry out its threats. “The first is the complete failure by government over the years to incrementa­lly build the capacity of Food and Drugs to effectivel­y execute what has been its increasing­ly important role. The second has to do with the fact that in a situation where the global fake drugs industry is valued at billions of dollars, considerat­ions of bribery and corruption have arisen here at the local level and there is a widespread view that it goes high up. This makes the job of an enforcemen­t agency like Food and Drugs difficult.

Current Director of the GAFDD, Marlan Cole, has repeatedly commented on the human resource limitation­s confrontin­g the Department, a circumstan­ce which he says inhibits its ability to perform its inspection functions effectivel­y.

Numerous cases have arisen in which public officials have been accused of accepting kickbacks from importers to allow for the clandestin­e importatio­n of drugs that do not comply with official regulation­s. Some of these drugs, it is believed, find their way to a number of staterun and private medical institutio­ns across the country.

While the new regulation­s stipulate that all drugs imported into Guyana must be registered with the GAFDD “in compliance with a New Drug Registrati­on requiremen­t, Food and Drug Act Chap 34:03-Regulation­s 1977, Regulation 78,” the Stabroek Business source said that such a stipulatio­n can only be enforced “if the Department has a clear idea regarding all of the entry points through which drugs enter the country.” “You would be surprised if you were to come to a full understand­ing of all of the various ways through which drugs enter the country,” the source said.

Dripping with corruption, the global fake drugs industry is estimated to have penetrated poor countries to the extent that one in 10 medicines imported into those countries are counterfei­t and likely responsibl­e for the deaths of tens of thousands of children and adults from diseases ranging from malaria and pneumonia to cancer, every year.

Counterfei­t drugs include products that have not been approved by regulators, fail to meet quality standards or deliberate­ly misreprese­nt an ingredient, according to the WHO.

In 2013, the WHO set up a voluntary global monitoring system for substandar­d and fake drugs and has received reports of about 1,500 problemati­c medicines including drugs that claim to treat heart problems, diabetes, fertility problems, mental health issues and cancer. Some of these drugs reportedly find their way into state hospitals where the overwhelmi­ng majority of patients are working class people.

The WHO estimates that several countries could be spending in excess of US$23 billion on counterfei­t drugs.

“Once you examine all of the dimensions to the fake drugs industry as uncovered by the WHO and other research entities you very quickly realise just how helpless our own Food and Drug Department is in, given its present state,” the source said.

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