The Jerusalem Post

No more freebies? India to crack down on shady marketing by drugmakers

- • By ZEBA SIDDIQUI

– India, one of the world’s largest markets for pharmaceut­icals, is drawing up its first set of marketing rules for drugmakers, restrictin­g gifts and trips offered to doctors and pharmacist­s to 1,000 rupees ($15), according to a draft proposal seen by Reuters.

Such rules are common overseas but are not set in stone in India, where campaigner­s have long demanded a crackdown on unethical selling practices that include gifts such as electrical appliances and foreign trips to woo physicians and pharmacist­s into prescribin­g and stocking specific medicines.

The country has voluntary marketing guidelines for drugmakers, but critics say they are ineffectiv­e.

“In India, corruption and bribery of doctors is widespread,” said Samiran Nundy, a leading gastrointe­stinal surgeon. “I’ve seen a range of ways in which this works, from presents to doctors to paying for them to attend conference­s.”

“It’s great that marketing rules are coming into place,” he said. “I hope that these will be enforced.”

Besides limiting marketing spend, the draft proposal drawn up the Department of Pharmaceut­icals (DoP) and under review of the Law Ministry, also forbids drugmakers from making false claims on the curative abilities and efficacy of drugs.

An official at the DoP declined to comment on the draft’s specifics but confirmed to Reuters that the order was under review, though the implementa­tion date for the rules is not set.

The draft says a failure to abide by the rules would result in a marketing ban on a drugmaker for up to a year or more, depending on the degree of the violation. It would also lead to confiscati­on of all packs of the company’s highest-selling drug brands, which would then be given to government hospitals.

Companies would also be able to turn a marketing suspension order into a fine, according to the proposal, by paying penalties of between 500,000 rupees ($7,800) and 100 million rupees ($1.56 million), depending on the order’s severity.

TRIAL SAMPLES

The rules limit the number of free samples a company can offer a doctor to full treatment courses for three patients.

But they don’t specify that the only new medicine samples can be given away for free, noted Amitava Guha, national co-covener of the health-care-focused group Jan Swasthya Abhiyan.

“If this is applicable to all medicines of a company, there will be no change in the present situation,” he said, calling it a major loophole that the companies could exploit.

Guha also said the marketing-ban penalty was vague because it did not specify if it would bar the company from marketing all or specific products. The penalty would be “meaningles­s” for a single product, as drug-company salesmen market in private meetings, so there is no material evidence, he said.

The Indian Pharmaceut­ical Associatio­n (IPA), a lobbying group of India’s largest drugmakers, said it supports mandatory rules for curbing undesirabl­e marketing practices, but they should be transparen­t, easy to implement and unambiguou­s.

This “should not be reduced to yet another “Inspector Raj,” IPA secretary general D.G. Shah said, adding that rules should also address the need for doctors’ continuing medical education. “Someone has to take responsibi­lity of keeping doctors up to date with the latest advances in the field of medicines.”

The draft rules allow drugmakers to sponsor trips for doctors, pharmacist­s and relatives to attend seminars, medical conference­s or scientific meetings, so long as the companies maintain a record of the minutes, expenses and agenda.

MANDATORY CODE

In a letter last year, Tapan Sen, a member of India’s upper house of Parliament, urged the government to act on drafting a mandatory code on the marketing of pharmaceut­icals, citing irregular practices by several companies.

Indian media reported that the letter said the country’s largest drugmaker, Sun Pharma, Abbott India and privately held Macleods Pharmaceut­icals were among drugmakers found to have sent doctors on “pleasure trips.”

At the time, Abbott said it had a strict policy against providing gifts and other incentives to doctors, while Macleods refuted the allegation­s.

Sun told Reuters it organizes “continuous medical education” programs to educate doctors, not promote its products, and these are compliant with the voluntary marketing guidelines set by the government in 2015.

The current draft says companies will be allowed to organize screening camps or awareness campaigns at public health centers, but it bars advertisin­g by stealth and mandates that doctors involved in such events be paid commensura­te to their average daily income.

To ensure implementa­tion of the rules, an “ethics compliance officer” of the rank of joint secretary to the Indian government would be appointed.

Pharmaceut­ical marketing practices have long been a subject of controvers­y globally. In India, where health insurance is scarce and many rely on pharmacist­s for medical advice, critics say sketchy practices have led to over-prescripti­on of strong cocktail drugs, causing drug resistance.

GlaxoSmith­Kline was battered by a bribery scandal in China that landed it with a record $490m. fine in 2014.

It went on to slash the number of sales representa­tives and overhaul its business globally, stopping salesbased incentives for drug reps and reducing paid junkets for doctors.

‘In India, corruption and bribery of doctors is widespread’

 ?? (Danish Siddiqui/Reuters) ?? A REPRESENTA­TIVE for Abbott enters a doctor’s clinic in Pune, India. The country has voluntary marketing guidelines for drugmakers, but critics say they are ineffectiv­e.
(Danish Siddiqui/Reuters) A REPRESENTA­TIVE for Abbott enters a doctor’s clinic in Pune, India. The country has voluntary marketing guidelines for drugmakers, but critics say they are ineffectiv­e.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Israel