THISDAY

NIROPHARM Calls for Regulation Strengthen­ing against Drug Abuse

- Martins Ifijeh

As part of efforts to tackle the increase in drug abuse in Nigeria among youths, the Nigeria Representa­tive of Overseas Pharmaceut­ical Manufactur­ers (NIROPHARM) has blamed weak regulatory control and poor funding of regulatory agencies for the drug crisis in the country.

NIROPHARM in a statement signed by the President, Mr. Femi Soremekun, said: “The regulatory environmen­t is weak and deficient, and requires strengthen­ing for comprehens­ive regulation of all outlets involved in the supply and dispensing of pharmaceut­ical products.”

The group said the abuse of codeine, other opioids such as tramadol as well as hypnotics such as flunitraze­pam is endemic and requires a holistic approach by the government, regulators, industry players and the community to mitigate.

They urged government to set up a multidisci­plinary committee to evaluate the root causes as well as look at ways of managing the menace of substance abuse in Nigeria.

NIROPHARM, however, commended the recent efforts of the National Assembly in proposing two bills on substance abuse and mental health, as well as drug control. The group urged government to work with stakeholde­rs on proffering safer alternativ­es to these drugs of abuse so as to prevent imminent undergroun­d and illicit trade on these opioids.

They said government should put adequate measures in place for the fallout of the ban on codeine syrups including managing the withdrawal syndrome on addicts and also create more rehabilita­tion centres to take care of such fallouts.

NIROPHARM said the need for the implementa­tion of the National Drug Distributi­on Guidelines (NDDG) cannot be over-emphasised and NIROPHARM fully support the January 2019 take-off date.

They said growing menace of unhindered access to all classes of drugs by the populace could only by tamed with good distributi­on practices by all stakeholde­rs and proper oversight by regulators.

NIROPHARM said the NDDG must be hinged on good infrastruc­ture, regulation­s and technology with track and trace components such as serialisat­ion of each pack of product released into the Nigerian pharmaceut­ical supply chain; where all players in the supply and value chain are locked in, creating transparen­cy on what comes in and what goes out.

NIROPHARM said it was open to consultati­on with government to look at ways to improve the drug distributi­on system in Nigeria.

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