Waikato Times

Cold, flu medicines with pseudoephe­drine to go back on the pharmacy shelves

- RNZ

Cold and flu medicines containing pseudoephe­drine can once again be sold on pharmacy shelves.

The legislatio­n which will allow medicines containing pseudoephe­drine to be available over the counter has now passed its third reading in Parliament.

The Misuse of Drugs (Pseudoephe­drine) Amendment Bill will reclassify pseudoephe­drine from a restricted medicine, allowing the public to purchase it from a pharmacy without a prescripti­on.

Pseudoephe­drine is an ingredient used to make the drug methamphet­amine – or P – and then-prime minister John Key announced a plan to ban over the counter sales of drugs containing pseudoephe­drine in 2009.

The ban came into force two years later with the reclassifi­cation of pseudoephe­drine as a Class B2 prescripti­on-only drug.

Associate Health Minister and ACT leader David Seymour has been championin­g his party's policy to return the drugs to pharmacies.

Seymour told Parliament banning pseudoephe­drine cough and cold medicines did not end the P epidemic.

“What actually happened is that those people in the business of selling it started to connect with criminal elements offshore and created more sophistica­ted ways of sourcing P from bigger, badder criminals and managed to bring it in at a lower price and make it more available to P addicts than ever before.”

Seymour said it was “incredibly unlikely” that people “are going to return to a less efficient, more expensive way of manufactur­ing P that involves going around pharmacies and buying up as many tablets as you can”.

Due to the state of the health system it was difficult for New Zealanders to get a prescripti­on to obtain these types of medicines and which had “left New Zealanders significan­tly worse off", he said.

Labour’s Ayesha Verrall said her party had supported the bill but had some concerns that she did not feel had been adequately dealt with.

While those seeking meth could seek it more cheaply from overseas suppliers, there will be desperate people who will now have the opportunit­y to make meth by cooking it from P, she said.

There were ways to mitigate that, she said. “I’m particular­ly disappoint­ed that the proposal that pseudoephe­drine be treated like codeine and be required to be kept in a locked safe in pharmacies has not made its way into the bill in its final form.”

Verrall said the shortened select committee process meant that some of the potential risks had not been addressed.

 ?? ?? Cold and flu medicines containing pseudoephe­drine in 2009.
Cold and flu medicines containing pseudoephe­drine in 2009.

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