Business Standard

MEDICAL DEVICE FIRMS SEE OPPORTUNIT­Y

But drug firms brace for supply disruption­s

- SOHINI DAS More on www.business-standard.com

Sumit Marwa, owner of Bengaluru-based Dispoline India, makers of single-use items used in the health care sector (especially hospitals), has seen a 15-fold surge in enquiries for masks. His sales have soared by four to five times.

As fear grips the world, demand for protective gear used by health care profession­als and citizens is on a rise. And, supply disruption from China has opened a window of opportunit­ies for Indian medical device makers.

Marwa gets masks made on contract and he think the total market for masks in this country runs into billions of units. At present, there is specific demand for what he called anti-viral or N-95 masks. The common surgical or pollution masks only offer protection from certain bacteria. The ex-factory price of the routine masks are often as low as a rupee, Marwa said.

As for the N-95 ones, even Chinese provinces are enquiring for sourcing from India. So, their prices have soared from ~20-25 apiece earlier to around ~40. “Traders are procuring the masks from manufactur­ers and are mostly shipping out of the country — there is demand from entire Southeast Asia.

Prices in the domestic market have spiked as a result. The government, too, is procuring in large quantities for health care profession­als as they create isolation centers in government hospitals,” said one Mumbai-based surgical devices maker.

He said that this is a short-term opportunit­y. Once supplies stabilise from China, these export orders are likely to end. Rajiv Nath, forum coordinato­r of the Associatio­n of Indian Manufactur­ers of Medical Devices, an umbrella body for this industry, said demand from China for such protective medical gear and consumable­s comes in the wake of a shutdown in several of their provinces as the virus spreads.

India imports around 80 per cent of its medical devices from America, parts of Europe and China. China’s share is about a tenth, mostly of low-end ones like surgical consumable­s, instrument­s, some electronic devices like ECG machines. Nath said these have some market share in India, being 15-30 per cent cheaper than the local produce. His own company, Hindustan Syringes and Medical Devices, of Dispovan fame, has lost market share in the India market from an earlier 80 per cent to a current 50 per cent, for cheaper import.

The China lockdown could, however, impact medicine supplies but after a lag. India is dependent on China for import of the raw material for active pharmaceut­ical ingredient­s (APIS) and intermedia­tes to make drugs. About two-third of the country’s API requiremen­t is from China, around $2.4 billion worth of import in 2018-19.

The dependence is as high as 90 per cent for some fermentati­on-based APIS. These are used to make common antibiotic­s like penicillin.

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