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: Editorial: Killer cough syrups #IndiaNEWS #Editorials India’s reputation as a global pharma hub has taken a severe beating now. The World Health Organisation’s medical product alert for four

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Posted in: #IndiaNEWS #Editorials

Editorial: Killer cough syrups #IndiaNEWS #Editorials
India’s reputation as a global pharma hub has taken a severe beating now. The World Health Organisation’s medical product alert for four ‘contaminated’ cough and cold syrups, manufactured and exported by a Haryana-based pharmaceutical firm, has turned the spotlight on India’s drug regulatory system. The syrups have been ‘potentially linked’ to the deaths of 66 children in Gambia, a tiny West African nation. According to the WHO, the products in question have so far been detected only in Gambia, linked to acute kidney injury in children, but there is a possibility that these may have been supplied to other countries. The global health body has asked various nations to detect and remove these products from circulation to prevent further harm. It is a cause for concern that the tentative results of the laboratory analysis of one of the cough syrups have confirmed ‘unacceptable’ amounts of diethylene glycol and ethylene glycol, both toxic chemicals that can cause acute kidney injury, in four of the 23 samples tested. The syrups were manufactured by Maiden Pharmaceuticals based in Sonipat, a company that was under the scanner in the past in Kerala, Gujarat, Jammu & Kashmir and Bihar for producing poor quality medicines. The Central Drugs Standard Control Organisation has initiated an investigation in collaboration with Haryana’s drug control agency. The chemical contaminants in the solvent used in the syrups are toxic to humans and can also lead to acute kidney injury that may be fatal in children.
The matter needs to be thoroughly probed in a time-bound manner as it will have a bearing on India’s image as an international pharma hub. The large-scale manufacture and worldwide distribution of Covid-19 vaccines over the past year and a half have brought immense goodwill to India and this reputation must be preserved. It is critical to take exemplary corrective measures to ensure that all the good work is not undone. Such isolated instances should not be allowed to cast a bad shadow on the entire drug industry. There is a need to strengthen the regulatory mechanism and coordination among the States in enforcing quality standards. It should never be business as usual when substandard or spurious medicinal drugs put countless lives at risk. The tardy probe into the deaths of 12 infants in Jammu & Kashmir’s Udhampur two years ago, allegedly caused by the consumption of an adulterated cough syrup produced by a Himachal Pradesh-based manufacturer, has already laid bare the country’s systemic flaws. The drug regulatory authorities at the central and State levels need to get their act together and work in close coordination.


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