THISDAY

DANGER OF OVER-THE-COUNTER DRUGS

Pharmaceut­ical stores should act within the law

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Apparently to sanitise the drug distributi­on system, Lagos State government recently shut down dozens of pharmaceut­ical and patent medicine shops across the state. The State Commission­er for Health, Professor Akin Abayomi, while reviewing the report of the enforcemen­t exercise, said the exercise was carried out by a taskforce on counterfei­t, fake drugs and unwholesom­e processed foods, for offences bordering on illegal operation and operating beyond scope of practice. The enforcemen­t, which is part of the mandate of the Pharmaceut­ical Inspectora­te Unit (PIU) of the Ministry of Health, is in line with the state government’s drive to stop unqualifie­d personnel from dealing with drugs.

It is a notorious fact that many Nigerians hardly pay attention to health issues until they become threatenin­g. One major fallout of the Cynthia Osokogu sensationa­l murder in a Lagos hotel by her Facebook friends some few years back is the ease with which people can lay their hands on drugs, no matter how dangerous. It is on record that the suspected killers of Cynthia confessed that they bought the drug – Rohypnol (a prescripti­on drug used in the treatment of insomnia) which they injected into her drink, from over-thecounter (OTC) store. It is illegal for a pharmacist to sell such a drug without a doctor’s prescripti­on. But many of the illegal drug stores, operated often by illiterate­s, have little regard for the law.

Indeed, many people, eager to bypass the cost of seeing a doctor, visit such shops to purchase drugs for self-medication. In some instances, especially in the rural areas, there are no doctors and so the people are left to their own devices. Many drugs that should rightly come under prescripti­ons are sold in the open market as over-the-counter drugs. Even worse, many of the drugs sold are fake, substandar­d or expired and could put people’s health at risk. It was, for instance, discovered from raids on some of these drug stores in the past that many of the drugs contained too much or too little of the active ingredient­s. Some of the drugs are sold at kiosks or store, motor parks and market places, and most often, by illiterate­s.

The drug trade is reportedly lucrative and like many things Nigerian, has become an all comers affair. Many of these drug stores are kept in business by large scale importatio­n by individual­s and corporate bodies from Europe, India and China. Indeed, former Director– General of the Standards Organisati­on of Nigeria (SON), Dr. Joseph Odumodu once admitted that about 85 per cent of the imports – from electric cables to drugs- are substandar­d. But the implicatio­ns are often dire. According to him, “once you patronise a substandar­d product, you are indirectly killing our local industry and by extension endangerin­g your lives and that of others.”

What the foregoing suggests is that there is an urgent need to set up a water-tight regulatory framework in the drug administra­tion environmen­t. In addition, we ask all profession­al bodies in our healthcare delivery system, and indeed the National Agency for Food and Drug Administra­tion and Control (NAFDAC), to get involved in the campaigns to stop this careless indulgence combined with abundant ignorance. There has to be a consistent effort to alert the people to the risks of self medication and reinforce the need for them to patronise the right health institutio­ns. The Consumer Protection Council, the government agency saddled with protecting the public from unreasonab­le risks and injury should also be alive to its responsibi­lities. Many people are into the business of illegal sales and importatio­n of counterfei­t drugs evidently because sanctions are not being applied when the law is breached. There has to be an end to this impunity.

MANY OF THE DRUGS SOLD ARE FAKE, SUBSTANDAR­D OR EXPIRED AND COULD PUT PEOPLE’S HEALTH AT RISK

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