BusinessLine (Chennai)

Need to clamp down on prescripti­on-less sales of antibiotic­s

The unchecked sale of antibiotic­s is fuelling a silent epidemic of drug resistance in India

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M Ramesh

Most of us have the experience of getting antibiotic­s from a pharmacist without a doctor’s prescripti­on. Commercial pressures propel the pharmacist to commit a blatant violation of law. Nobody complains, because whether the ailment goes after taking the antibiotic or not, the episode of buying the medicine without a prescripti­on is quickly forgotten.

But several studies have emerged to show that the rampant practice of consuming antibiotic­s indiscrimi­nately silently contribute­s to a much bigger health issue, namely, antimicrob­ial resistance (AMR, aka antimicrob­ial drug resistance or ADR). This refers to the infection causing microbes developing resistance to an antibiotic — the medicine fails to cure.

Studies show that India has a high prevalence of AMR. For example, in 2019, a group of Indian and American researcher­s led by Sumanth Gandra of the Centre for Disease

Dynamics, Washington DC, conducted a patient-level antimicrob­ial susceptibi­lity test (AST) over 5,103 patients from ten hospitals. “The overall mortality rate of patients was 13.1 per cent and there was a significan­t relationsh­ip between multidrug resitance and mortality,” the authors say in their paper.

AMR comes from several sources. “The OTC sale of antibiotic­s is recognised as a pathway for the emergence of antimicrob­ial resistance; a serious public health challenge in need of urgent regulatory responses,” says another, 2021 paper which delves into the regulatory aspects of antibiotic­s dispensati­on. The authors conducted a study of 261 pharmacies in Bengaluru, in which the pharmacy was requested to give antibiotic­s, without a prescripti­on, for two ailments — for an adult complainin­g of upper respirator­y tract infection and a child suœering from acute gastroente­ritis. As many as 174 pharmacies gave the medicine over-the-counter (OTC), even though neither condition didn’t require antibiotic treatment.

Similarly, in Tamil Nadu “observatio­ns and interviews with pharmacist­s at 24 pharmacies revealed that 78.7 per cent of antibiotic­s sold within the study period were given without a prescripti­on.” Another study of the same authors reported that of the 40 New Delhi pharmacist­s, none said they refused to sell antibiotic­s without prescripti­on. “Despite being illegal, OTC sales of antibiotic­s by pharmacies without a valid prescripti­on from a registered medical practition­er (RMP) appear widespread in India, highlighti­ng serious problems around the regulation of this pathway for emergence of AMR,” the paper says.

Often people take antibiotic­s even for viral infections, which are indiœerent to antibiotic­s and self-limiting.

The Drugs and Cosmetics Act, 1940, and the Drugs and Cosmetics Rules (DCR), 1945, designates all antibiotic­s as prescripti­on drugs under the Schedule H category. In 2014, an amendment was made to the Schedule H category to include second- and third-generation antibiotic­s into a new category called Schedule H1. For Schedule H1 drugs, pharmacist­s are required to maintain a separate register for the sale of these antibiotic­s and retain prescripti­on copies. This amendment was implemente­d to curb the widespread practice of antibiotic purchase from retail pharmacies without a valid prescripti­on (old or outdated). “However, several studies before and after 2014 indicate that consumers can still purchase antibiotic­s without a valid prescripti­on as pharmacist­s still dispense antibiotic­s to their customers/clients/ patients by attending to their symptoms,” notes yet another paper.

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