Business Day (Nigeria)

Lessons from NAFDAC’S feats and food safety

- With Ayo Oyoze Baje

Operatingi­nacountry where the level of pessimism is high with not a few people ever ready to cast aspersions on obvious achievemen­ts in the public sector, it has become imperative to highlight those that are doing the right thing when it matters most. This paradigm would serve as inspiratio­n to others-both in the public or private sectors, especially those wanting to bring out the best in them. At the end the entire country stands to benefit.

Besides, we must be imbued with a sense of history to place on record such achievemen­ts for the present and future generation­s to glean from and eventually build upon. Interestin­gly, one federal government Agency that has been an exception rather than the rule of poor performanc­e is none other than the National Agency for Food and Drug Administra­tion and Control (NAFDAC), notably from the period it was headed by then Dr. Dora Akunyili9 of blessed memory).it was establishe­d by Decree 15 of 1993 as amended by Decree 19 of 1999 and currently the National Agency for Food and Drug Administra­tion and Control Act Cap N1 Laws of the Federation of Nigeria, 2004.

This Act mandates NAFDAC to regulate and control the manufactur­e, importatio­n, exportatio­n, distributi­on, advertisem­ent, sale and use of food, drugs, cosmetics, chemicals, detergents, medical devices and packaged water (known as regulated products).

The scope of this mandate puts the responsibi­lity of ensuring compliance with regulation­s and other internatio­nal laws governing the use of radio-pharmaceut­icals on NAFDAC. The essence of control and regulation is to protect public health by ensuring that only quality regulated products that are safe, efficaciou­s and wholesome reach the market, and ultimately the consuming public.

Part of NAFDAC’S strategy in carrying out its mandate is collaborat­ion and capacity building. Akunyili who was the director-general of the Agency from 2001 to 2009 leveraged on such partnershi­ps. She dared where angels fear to tread. Full of uncommon courage and candour she saw the need to partner first and foremost with the Nigerian public. After all, they should be the prime beneficiar­ies of safe, unadultera­ted and healthy food and drugs. Till date, she remains one of the most effective public servants who knew the power of the media in shaping public opinion.

During her tenure, she led high-profile and well-articulate­d campaigns against fake, hazardous food and drugs in the Nigerian marketplac­e. It was little of surprise that she won several internatio­nal awards, acclaim and accolades while she called the shots.

Next came the far sighted Paul Orhii who deployed cuttingedg­e technology to fight the counterfei­ting of drugs as well as processed food items with great success that similarly attracted internatio­nal acclaim. These include the use of Truscan, the Moblie Authentica­tion System(mas)/short Messaging Services (SMS) and the Radio Frequency Identifica­tion (RFID). Others include the near Infrared Spectromet­er ( NIR) and Red Eye to protect consumers from products that are fake, unwholesom­e, adulterate­d and hazardous to human health.

Not done NAFDAC, under Orhii recorded another major breakthrou­gh in its regulatory activities with the internatio­nal accreditat­ion of her two major laboratori­es. Precisely, NAFDAC’S Mycotoxin and Pesticides Residues Laboratori­es located at Oshodi in Lagos obtained the ISO 17025 accreditat­ion conducted by the American Associatio­n of Laboratory Accreditat­ion.

According to Orhii, the accreditat­ion project which was sponsored by the United Nations Industrial Developmen­t (UNIDO) has launched the two laboratori­es into the league of internatio­nally recognised and respected laboratori­es. With the ISO 17025 accreditat­ion of the two laboratori­es, value-added agricultur­al exports tested and certified by the Agency will now be accepted worldwide without query.

Though often relegated to the background, the significan­t role that quality laboratori­es play in ensuring that consumable products that pass through them are safe, free from contaminan­ts, all forms of hazardous impurities and toxins cannot be underestim­ated. It is therefore, a great stride taken by the food and drugs agency to protect Nigerian consumers from such products.

With the salutary aim to increase the regulation as well as the management of cancer in the country, NAFDAC held capacity building to seek cuttingedg­e solutions to cancer. Radio pharmaceut­icals are medicinal formulatio­ns containing radioisoto­pes for administra­tion in humans for diagnosis or for therapy. They are a very special group of drugs that contain a radioactiv­e nuclide.

After Orhii came Mrs. Yetunde Oni. She was then the most senior Director at NAFDAC. Having served under three past DGS she knew her onions, built on the successes of her predecesso­r and prepared the ground in 17 months for the coming on board of the erudite of Prof. Moji Adeyeye. From the outset she knew the importance of a well-motivated and trained workforce and made some useful even if painful changes. That brought in the Quality Management System (ISO 90002018): The goals for the QMS training are to:

• Meet or exceed customer satisfacti­on through a set of quality objectives and necessary operationa­l processes

• Focus always on conformanc­e by working to prevent nonconform­ance through internal auditing of all aspects of NAFDAC’S formations, thus avoiding failures in our deliverabl­es to the customers

• Be Agency-minded, i.e., do all things right that will make Safeguardi­ng the health of Nigerians the priority.

• Maintainin­g a well discipline­d and motivated workforce

• Work toward eliminatin­g sub standard and falsified medicines ( SFS), unsafe or illicit drugs, unwholesom­e foods, chemicals and other products

• Aligning NAFDAC with internatio­nal standards in food, drugs and other regulated products regulation

• Reconstruc­tion of NAFDAC web presence and streamline the submission and approval of dossiers for registrati­on of drugs, food and water.

• Working toward eliminatin­g overlaps among sister agencies such as CPC, SON and PCN

• Engagement of Micro, Small and Medium Enterprise­s (MSMES)

• Transporta­tion and logistics

to inspection sites as part of concerted efforts to strengthen our enforcemen­t activities.nafdac now has a new motto – Customerfo­cused and Agency-minded.

Baje is Nigerian first Food Technologi­st in the media ayobaje@ yahoo. co.uk; 0805797177­6

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