CAUTION : SUBSTANDARD AND FAKE DRUGS IN GHANA.
FOOD AND DRUGS AUTHORITY, PHARMACY COUNCIL, PHARMACEUTICAL SOCIETY OF GHANA, MINISTRY OF HEALTH IN A WEB OF COMPROMISE
Following information gathered from the recently ended Annual General Meeting (AGM) of the Pharmaceutical Society of Ghana (PSG) it came out that drugs and hospital consumables in the Ghanaian market have poor quality. Among these products are antibiotics, antimalarials, rapid diagnostic test kits, sterile products and, drugs classified as emergency drugs. These products and more do not seem to work or have gained microbial resistance . This situation is a serious contributory factor to the high rate of morbidity and mortality in the country, especially in the case of antibiotics.
The most mind bugling aspect of this trend is that some of these products have found their way through the MOH procurement system into our public hospitals
In 2009, the World Health Organization (WHO) defined ‘substandard’ drugs as “out of specification”, these are authorized medical products that fail to meet either their quality standards or specifications, or both. We aim to raise awareness of the problem of substandard drugs; a problem that we regard as having the potential to be a public-health crisis.
The WHO defines ‘counterfeit’ drugs as ‘medicines that are deliberately and fraudulently mislabelled with respect to identity and/or source
Considering a research on Artesunate, 53% of samples (n = 188) contained no artesunate. Burma, Lao People’s Democratic Republic, Vietnam, Cambodia and Thailand
Artemisinin-based drugs Thirteen out of fourteen (93%) contained either too low or too high a dose of the specified drug GhanaEl Duah and Ofori-Kwakye (2012) [22]
Poor-quality medicines present a serious public health problem, particularly in emerging economies and developing countries, and may have a significant impact on the national clinical and economic burden
Substandard medicines are widespread and represent a threat to health because they can inadvertently lead to healthcare failures, such as antibiotic resistance and the spread of disease within a community, as well as death or additional illness in individuals
Dr Richard Akintoyin of Department of Medicine, University of Ilorin Teaching Hospital (UITH) Nigeria, has alerted the public of the circulation of ineffective and substandard anti-snake venoms in the country. Akintoyin made the warnings in Ilorin during his research paper presentation entitled: “Severe Snakebite Envenomation: A near fatal case of portable anti-venom innefficacy”
The serious danger lies with the emergency drugs like oxytocin which is now awarded a procurement price of 0.21peswas which is going to open the gate for the most inferior brands to flood our public health institutions. This can defeat the quest to satisfy the sdg 3 which seeks to reduce maternal mortality.
In 2012, the United States Promoting the Quality of Medicines (PQM) program worked in conjunction with the Ghana Food & Drugs Authority (FDA) to sample and assess the quality of some key maternal health products (uterotonics) across all the 10 regions of Ghana. Samples were picked up from all the major categories of dispensing points, such as private clinics, public polyclicinics, pharmacies, drug stores, medical depots, etc.
It was found that less than one-tenth of the oxytocin (an important maternal health product used to reduce harmful bleeding in women after child-birth) on the market was on sale legally. For some of the products it was not even possible to find out their origin.
According to Obrempong-Nana Kwaku Ampomah a Journalist, all the ergometrine tablets that were sampled FAILED to pass the basic tests for quality. Nearly all the oxytocin products sampled were also shown to have been wrongly formulated.
These are the medicines being dispensed to our mothers, sisters and wives in Ghana today. Just imagine the havoc that is being caused. What is the point of free maternal care when pregnant and nursing mothers are being injected with poisons?
We need systems to root out corruption, which is at the root of this problem
The Pharmacy and Poisons Board has issued an alert against fake snake anti-venom that has found its way into the African market particularly the Kenyan market.
“The board would like to notify the general public of the following falsified and unregistered anti-snake venom products in circulation,” the regulatory body said in a statement to media houses.
PPB named the brand ‘Puff Udder’, with Lot Number 000697, and the date of manufacture indicated as September 2015, and the expiry date shown as September 2022.
The second anti-venom named by the board is indicated as ‘Ant Venom’, and has no manufacture, dosage and usage instruction details.
Most of them also don’t have qualified persons to track adverse reactions and advice Doctors Pharmacist,Techs ,and nurses of antidotes when the need arises
REF:https://ift.tt/2p5EywL
IN GHANA, most Anti snake serums procured by MOH are substandard and do not combat the effect of most local Snake venoms. Most of these product suppliers do not submit clinical trials of the products to indicate that they can be efficient against the snake venoms of the country. ,some of them might have issues with their mother country or WHO.
Distribution of emergency drugs are not the best, cold chain systems are broken along the line putting patients at serious risk.
Like the GFA, over the years, Some Health Authorities like MOH, FDA, Pharmacy Council, Medical Stores, Pharmaceutical Society of Ghana, procurement directors at MOH, are in bed with some suppliers thereby allowing this circumventing and manipulating of procurement processes and standards to prevail
The Minister of Health, the FDA Boss, the Registrar of Pharmacy Council, the Chief Pharmacist should be called to address these critical issues as it is leading to the deaths of innocent Ghanaians.
Government should encourage procurement from local industries where monitoring is done right from production to distribution. It is our Hope that our health would no longer be compromised
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