The Freeman

Stores closed over counterfei­t drugs, unlicensed pharmacist­s

- Vanessa L. Almeda, Assignment Editor

Thirteen establishm­ents including one pharmacy in Mandaue City were padlocked by food and drug authoritie­s for selling counterfei­t drugs and operating without a licensed pharmacist.

The Food and Drug Administra­tion in Central Visayas has also disclosed that two establishm­ents in the province of Cebu are considered ‘notorious’ and are facing surveillan­ce operations by personnel of the Regulation and Enforcemen­t Unit (REU) of the said agency in the fight against the proliferat­ion of counterfei­t or fake drugs.

Sarah Oriol, FDA officer III, said the 13 establishm­ents padlocked since October include four drugstores from Mandaue and Bohol and two in Iloilo City.

The FDA operation covered Central, Western and Eastern Visayas regions.

Oriol who spoke with the media during the regular Associatio­n of Government Informatio­n Officers (AGIO-7) forum at the Department of Health regional field office on Tuesday, said only one of those padlocked was found to have sold counterfei­t drugs while the others did not have a licensed pharmacist.

“But still we can relate this to the other establishm­ents because if there are no licensed pharmacist­s around, it is possible that the drugstore may have been selling counterfei­t or substandar­d drugs,” she said.

As of October 2015, the agency’s regional team has confirmed 24 prescripti­on drugs which are considered counterfei­t. This is aside from 74 suspected counterfei­t drugs seized separately by the National Bureau of Investigat­ion (NBI).

Oriol said the 74 counterfei­t drugs, however, will be turned over to them for further testing.

Counterfei­t drugs are those found to contain below 80 percent of active pharmaceut­ical ingredient­s.

Asked what these common ‘fake’ drugs are, Oroil said these are floucinoni­de ointments found in Korean stores.

“Notorious” drugstores

Meanwhile, the food and drug agency disclosed that there are two “notorious” drugstores in the province that are on a tight watch.

Oriol is not disclosing the names of the establishm­ents while monitoring is ongoing. A total of 23 establishm­ents are now on a tight watch in the three regions covered by FDA-7.

She said these two firms are being placed on the watch list because they are very brazen in their activities. She said the expiry dates plastered on blister packs of medicines are cut or tampered. Some also reportedly resort to peddling the drugs to sari-sari stores.

Meanwhile, aside from shutting down drugstores, the food and drug agency also sealed drug and cosmetic products at nine establishm­ents due to certain violations.

The ‘sealing’ of the products were done in cases where the entire establishm­ent cannot be padlocked because it is a combinatio­n of drugstore and merchandis­e.

These establishm­ents were found in Cebu, Lapu-Lapu and Talisay cities where x-ray machines were ‘sealed’ after it was found out that the establishm­ents were using it even without a licensed radiologic technologi­st.

Sari-sari stores

Officials admitted there is still a strong likelihood that fake and expired drugs are peddled in sari-sari stores in the city or in rural municipali­ties.

But Grace Cardona, FDA Officer II, said they have to receive verified reports about this.

She clarified that as much as this is a violation and the law prohibits the selling of prescripti­on drugs outside licensed drugstores and or establishm­ents, consumer vigilance can counter the malpractic­e.

“We can’t directly penetrate sari-sari stores because it is already outside our jurisdicti­on since we are not the ones who issue the license to them. But the best that we can do is to urge consumers to increase their vigilance, take responsibi­lity in our action that we have a role to play to this as well, and urge our local government units to help us too,” she said./JMO

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