Hindustan Times (Lucknow)

Condom-maker PSU at forefront of antibody testing kits

- Ramesh Babu and Venkatesha Babu letters@hindustant­imes.com ■

THIRUVANAN­THAPURAM/BENGALURU: In the 1970s, it played a key role in India’s family planning programme, manufactur­ing condoms branded Nirodh.

Just around three years ago, dismissed as a mere condom maker (it was more), there was an attempt to privatise the company.

Over the past month, it has been at the centre of controvers­ies -- on how it delayed placing orders for protective equipment for health care workers, or the margin it was adding to such equipment it sourced.

Meet the state-owned HLL Lifecare Limited (the HLL stands for Hindustan Latex

Limited, its avatar in its condom making days, but no one uses that name anymore), which has emerged an important part of the government’s fight against Covid-19.

The Thiruvanth­apuram, Kerala-based company has developed a rapid antibody diagnostic kit to test Covid-19 patients (in a mere 15-20 minutes, the company claims). According to EA Subramania­n,

director of technical operations of HLL Lifecare, the company was able to develop the test kit within a month. It has had experience in developing test kits for TB, dengue and malaria.

The rapid antibody diagnostic kit to test Covid-19 patients has been approved by the Indian Council of Medical Research, and validated by the National Virology

Institute in Pune. “We have got an order of 2 lakh kits to begin with and are planning to produce 20,000 per day in our Manesar plant in Haryana. Mass production will begin on Monday and two lakh kits will be dispatched within the next 10 days,” said Subramania­n. The production is scalable, he added.

The Union government has

already placed an order worth ~2,000 crore for the kits and other equipment. In fiscal year 2018-19, HLL Lifecare’s standalone revenues were ~1,471 crore and net profit , ~15.36 crore. Even including its five subsidiari­es it had revenues of ~1,696 crore and made a small loss of ~12.96 crore.

The test kits are important because government­s across the world are scrambling to manufactur­e or buy enough test kits. India, too, ordered on April 7 half-a-million rapid antibody test kits with at least seven Chinese companies receiving import licenses from the Drug Controller General of India (DGCI ) for the same.

Establishe­d in 1967, HLL Lifecare played a crucial role in the family planning campaign of the country, distributi­ng condoms at subsidised rates. Its brand Nirodh was the mascot of the family planning campaign and almost became a generic name for condoms in the country. Later it diversifie­d into other areas, making intrauteri­ne devices, contracept­ive pills, blood bags, surgical sutures, and Ayurvedic preparatio­ns.

The company says that unlike imported Covid-19 test kits, which cost ~700-800, its own kits will be priced ~350-400 (the final prices have not been fixed).

The health ministry has already authorised HLL Lifecare as the nodal procuremen­t agency for all medical requiremen­ts to fight Covid -19. It has been entrusted with procuremen­t of N95 surgical masks with respirator­y valves, personal protective garments, nitrile gloves, goggles, hand-held infrared thermomete­rs and hand sanitisers .

Since there is mounting demand for these products across the country, HLL floated an open tender and shortliste­d some of manufactur­ers who will now supply these, said a company official who asked not to be named. The company is also manufactur­ing some protective equipment in-house.

“We have also entered into an agreement with Sree Chithira Tirunal Institute for Medical Sciences and Technology for developing patient examinatio­n and disinfecti­on booths. The World Health Organizati­on is also funding us to make and procure more ventilator­s,” said Subramania­n.

Meanwhile, employees of the public sector unit are upbeat about the role their firm is playing in the Covid fight.

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