The Philippine Star

Dangerous cheaper medicine

- By MARICHU A. VILLANUEVA

There is something seriously ailing the Food and Drug Administra­tion (FDA), a government agency tasked to protect us from harmful products being sold in drugstores and market counters. This came out during the public hearing last Monday of the Senate oversight committee on quality affordable medicine chaired by Sen. Manuel Villar.

Villar has been conducting public hearings on proposed remedial legislatio­ns such as Senate Bill 2960, which seeks to amend certain sections of Republic Act 9502, or the Cheaper Medicine Act of 2008. SB 2960 proposes to create a Drug Price Regulatory Board.

At the Senate hearing, concerns were raised on the alleged failure by the FDA to effectivel­y go after unscrupulo­us traders engaged in illegal activities like selling counterfei­t medicine, most of which are reportedly being smuggled into the country. Consumer advocates earlier had taken to task the FDA in particular for its focus on what could be petty matters such as whether boticas or our neighborho­od drugstores sell drugs sans prescripti­on forms while glossing over its far more important job of strictly regulating the entry of imported drugs.

This bolsters the perceived lack of consistenc­y in FDA policies since the agency appears to be not strictly looking after the efficacy of these imported drugs of questionab­le quality. Thus, the FDA was urged to be more stringent in going after drugs manufactur­ed abroad that are being sold here, especially smuggled medicine of spurious quality.

These counterfei­t medicine may take the form of real medicine but which are packaged as a branded product. While they may be real medicine, they may have less efficacy than the real branded product.

Since these are counterfei­t products, these did not pass through laboratory tests and quality control by the FDA. Hence, this may pose health hazards or endanger the lives of people who may take these medicine of inferior quality or in less dosage.

Worse, some of these counterfei­t drugs are reportedly merely made of “gawgaw” or starch but are packaged or bottled seemingly by genuine pharmaceut­ical companies abroad.

Don’t take this lightly but some of these medicine reportedly being produced by these nefarious counterfei­t syndicates are popular branded products for men with erectile dysfunctio­n. They are so-called the “favorite” products of these counterfei­ters because there is a demand for these relatively expensive medicine for men willing to pay such an amount thinking these would quietly help them solve their problem.

No less than Philippine National Police (PNP) chief Director General Nicanor Bartolome confirmed that our country has become a veritable market for these counterfei­t drugs. The PNP chief disclosed his talks with visiting Internatio­nal Police (Interpol) Secretary General Ronald Noble who told him about the growing trade of counterfei­t medicine.

In his discussion with the Interpol head, Bartolome noted their concern over the proliferat­ion of counterfei­t medicine that is now deeply hurting the global pharmaceut­ical industry, which is a huge business. That’s why the Interpol, consisting of 190 member-countries that include the Philippine­s, is gravely concerned over this developmen­t in this part of the world.

In fact, Bartolome revealed, the Interpol is reportedly considerin­g internatio­nal celebrity, Fil-am singer Billy Crawford to be part of a universal collaborat­ion to help stir awareness against counterfei­t medicine.

Based on Interpol monitoring, Bartolome said counterfei­t drugs are reportedly being sourced mostly from at least three countries. Although he did not publicly reveal these countries, it is widely known in the pharmaceut­ical industry that these smuggled counterfei­t drugs are mostly sourced from India and China. This is not to say that the government­s of these countries are not doing anything to stop this illegal trade.

While the PNP is not exactly the agency in charge of determinin­g what are genuine and fake medicine, Bartolome said he gave to the Interpol head the PNP’S commitment to keep an aggressive campaign against counterfei­t drugs.

The PNP could only do so much to apply law enforcemen­t to help check the proliferat­ion of counterfei­t medicine. But the greater burden lies with the FDA as the government agency mandated to do this job.

At that Senate public hearing attended by Department of Health (DOH) Secretary Enrique Ona, it was gathered that the FDA has P191 million for this year. This was even lower than the FDA’S P205-million budget in the previous year. The meager annual budget of the FDA would not have been a problem for the agency had its P700-million income not been reverted to the National Treasury.

The FDA is reportedly not allowed to use its own funds unless it comes up with the five-year developmen­t program on the use of its income, supposedly required of it by the National Economic Developmen­t Authority (NEDA).

The FDA generates this income from fees collected from companies required to undergo laboratory tests for quality and standard control that the agency conducts on all manufactur­ed food and medicine products that are pre-screened before being sold in the market. So the agency should be a self-sustaining agency. Thanks, but no thanks to the national government, the FDA has to beg for its own funds.

So how can we expect the FDA to effectivel­y perform its mandate and to do this job not just in Metro Manila but also all over the country when no less than the national government takes away the wherewitha­l this agency has earned for itself?

The FDA, unlike other drug regulatory authoritie­s, does not even audit companies in other countries. This means it does not even know if a drug was properly manufactur­ed or just produced by a company in its own backyard. In contrast, most authoritie­s, including those in African countries, audit foreign drug manufactur­ers. This is embarrassi­ng and constitute­s negligence on the part of our FDA, to say the least.

The FDA needs to stamp out the proliferat­ion of counterfei­t drugs which are nothing but dangerous cheaper medicine. The FDA needs every resource to really make the Cheaper Medicine Law effectivel­y cure this national malady.

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