Stabroek News

Gov’t Analyst Dep’t and fight against fake drugs

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There was a hollow ring to this week’s warning from the Government Analyst Food and Drugs Department (GAFDD) regarding the circulatio­n of yet another fake drug, apparently an imitation of Daflon, which the Department says, is used for treating patients suffering from “chronic venous insufficie­ncy” (CVI) and other ailments.

The statement resembled the anguished cry of a drowning man who is under no illusions about any near term prospects of rescue. That has become part of the Department’s standard operating procedure, there being no other readily available viable tool with which to respond to the fake drugs menace.

We are not pointing fingers at the GAFDD here. Truth be told, it exists in a condition where it has been reduced to these belated ‘warnings’ issued long after the offending fake drugs have infiltrate­d the treatment system – hospitals, clinics etc – and most likely, after they would have already done a degree of damage, the extent of which we remain blissfully unaware. No one any longer doubts the helplessne­ss of the GAFDD, ill-equipped as it is to fend off the multi-billion dollar behemoth that is the fake drugs industry which now appears to have firmly fixed its tentacles in our patient treatment regime, a circumstan­ce that lends its afterthe-fact ‘alerts’ an air of decided absurdity. In effect, the GAFDD’s ‘media alerts’ notwithsta­nding, the national exposure to the dangers associated with fake drugs represents a closing of the stable doors long after the horses have bolted.

All of this is simply another way of saying that in circumstan­ces where, given our inability to suppress the internatio­nal fake drugs industry, there is every reason to seek to build the capabiliti­es of the GAFDD to minimise fake drug infiltrati­on, the authoritie­s persist in its quixotic pursuit of tilting at windmills knowing only too well that routinised delayed ‘red alerts’ will not help one iota to solve the problem.

From everything that we know about the fake drugs industry, it is a powerful global enterprise driven by huge profits and apparently subscribed to by institutio­ns some of which do business within the legitimate drugs industry. There are links, as well, with people who are concerned with the commerce rather than the ‘cure’ and who have made deep and damaging inroads into the drug procuremen­t regimes particular­ly in poor countries, either through the legitimate tendering systems of those countries, those conducting their business in the hinterland and interior regions, are still awaiting “the implementa­tion of government projects to address the deplorable roadways and the high fuel prices” which it says have been crippling businesses “through massive increases in operating expenses.”

or by way of clandestin­e importatio­n and distributi­on regimes that place these fake drugs in the medical mainstream.

Over time, the GAFDD has been less than effective in picking up the trail of the perpetrato­rs, or even when it does, neutralisi­ng them. This has been largely due to circumstan­ces that have to do either with limited resources or limited clout. This brings us to the matter of the limited human and technical resources at the disposal of the GAFDD over many years (a matter on which this newspaper has pronounced ad nauseam) and more importantl­y, the inability of government to change this. Then there has also been the difficulty associated with limited collaborat­ion between the GAFDD and the various other oversight and policing agencies, not least the Customs Administra­tion.

The fact is that the fake drugs industry, whether internatio­nally or here in Guyana, is driven by an organisati­onal structure that involves real people, a circumstan­ce that places the responsibi­lity for tackling Additional­ly, it numbers “access to lands for investment and the inefficien­cies of government processes” as being among its concerns.

the problem beyond the sole ambit of the GAFDD. Granted, it may not be as simple as it sounds, but the reality is that there are operators in the fake drugs trade who continue to be quite content to sabotage our national health system, callously and indiscrimi­nately putting at risk the physical well-being and even the lives of people seeking medical care and, as of now, we remain precarious­ly positioned in terms of our ability to turn back this threat.

Though this is by no means the first occasion on which the issue of fake drugs and the impotence of the authoritie­s has been raised here, surely, the impotence of the GAFDD, as reflected in the redundancy of its recent public alert on Daflon provides sufficient attestatio­n to the condition of national impotence in which we presently find ourselves as far as fending off the scourge of fake drugs is concerned. Hopefully, this can propel us in the direction of at least attempting to raise our defences to the level of a somewhat more effective deterrent.

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