Hohoe (V/R), Dec. 4, - An
estimated 1 in 10 medical products circulating in low- and middle-income
countries is either substandard or falsified, according to new research from
the World Health Organisation (WHO).
This means that people are taking
medicines that fail to treat or prevent disease. Not only is this a waste of
money for individuals and health systems that purchase these products, but
substandard or falsified medical products can cause serious illness or even
death.
“Substandard and falsified
medicines particularly affect the most vulnerable communities,” says Dr Tedros
Adhanom Ghebreyesus, WHO Director-General, in a release to the Ghana News
Agency.
“Imagine a mother who gives up
food or other basic needs to pay for her child’s treatment, unaware that the
medicines are substandard or falsified, and then that treatment causes her
child to die. This is unacceptable. Countries have agreed on measures at the
global level – it is time to translate them into tangible action.”
Since 2013, WHO has received 1500
reports of cases of substandard or falsified products. Of these, antimalarials
and antibiotics are the most commonly reported. Most of the reports (42%) come
from the WHO African Region, 21 percent from the WHO Region of the Americas,
and 21 percent from the WHO European Region.
This is likely just a small
fraction of the total problem and many cases may be going unreported. For
example, only 8 percent of reports of substandard or falsified products to WHO
came from the WHO Western Pacific Region, 6 percent from the WHO Eastern
Mediterranean Region, and just 2% from the WHO South-East Asia Region.
“Many of these products, like
antibiotics, are vital for people’s survival and wellbeing”, says Dr Mariângela
Simão, Assistant Director-General for Access to Medicines, Vaccines and
Pharmaceuticals at WHO.
“Substandard or falsified medicines
not only have a tragic impact on individual patients and their families, but
also are a threat to antimicrobial resistance, adding to the worrying trend of
medicines losing their power to treat”.
Prior to 2013, there was no
global reporting of this information. Since WHO established the Global
Surveillance and Monitoring System for substandard and falsified products, many
countries are now active in reporting suspicious medicines, vaccines and
medical devices.
WHO has trained 550 regulators
from 141 countries to detect and respond to this issue. As more people are
trained, more cases are being reported.
WHO has received reports of
substandard or falsified medical products ranging from cancer treatment to
contraception. They are not confined to high-value medicines or well-known
brand names and are split almost evenly between generic and patented products.
In conjunction with the first
report from the Global Surveillance and Monitoring System published today, WHO
is publishing research that estimates a 10.5 per cent failure rate in all
medical products used in low- and middle-income countries.
This study was based on more than
100 published research papers on medicine quality surveys done in 88 low- and
middle-income countries involving 48, 000 samples of medicines. Absence of accurate data means that these
estimates are just an indication of the scale of the problem.
More research is needed to more
accurately estimate the threat posed by substandard and falsified medical
products.
Based on 10 percent estimates of
substandard and falsified medicines, a modeling exercise developed by the
University of Edinburgh estimates that 72, 000 to 169, 000 children may be
dying each year from pneumonia due to substandard and falsified antibiotics.
A second model done by the London
School of Hygiene and Tropical Medicine estimates that 116 000 (64 000 – 158
000) additional deaths from malaria could be caused every year by substandard
and falsified antimalarials in sub-Saharan Africa, with a cost of US$38.5
million (21.4 million – 52.4 million) to patients and health providers for
further care due to failure of treatment.
Substandard medical products
reach patients when the tools and technical capacity to enforce quality
standards in manufacturing, supply and distribution are limited. Falsified
products, on the other hand, tend to circulate where inadequate regulation and
governance are compounded by unethical practice by wholesalers, distributors,
retailers and health care workers. A high proportion of cases reported to WHO
occur in countries with constrained access to medical products.
Modern purchasing models such as
online pharmacies can easily circumvent regulatory oversight. These are
especially popular in high-income countries, but more research is needed to
determine the proportion and impact of sales of substandard or falsified
medical products.
Globalization is making it harder
to regulate medical products. Many falsifiers manufacture and print packaging
in different countries, shipping components to a final destination where they
are assembled and distributed. Sometimes, offshore companies and bank accounts
have been used to facilitate the sale of falsified medicines.
“The bottom line is that this is
a global problem,” says Dr Simão stressing that “Countries need to assess the
extent of the problem at home and cooperate regionally and globally to prevent
the traffic of these products and improve detection and response.”
GNA

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