30 Dec 2005 12:43 pm
Hi I have just posted a new documentary about fake drugs from the east that I think you here will find interesting. Its free but you need to register to watch it, http://www.documentary-film.net/search/video-listings.php?e=12 bleu
30 Dec 2005 12:43 pm
Oh my...all my ax are from overseas! Makes me wary.
Wheldon Protocol for rrms since Oct '05. Added LDN 4.5mg qhs Oct '07. All supp's. Positive IGG's for Lyme Disease,Babesia, & Erlichiosis Sept. 2008. Currently: Mepron 750mg bid and Azithromycin 250mg qd for Babesia.
30 Dec 2005 08:28 pm
Good grief! I can't beleive it. has the whole world gone mad?
Marie
On CAP since Sept '05 for MS, RA, Asthma, sciatica. EDSS at start 5.5.(early cane) Now 6 (cane full time) Originally on: Doxy 200, Azith 3x week, Tini cont. over summer '07, Revamp of protocol in Summer '08 by Stratton due to functional loss; clarithro
1 Jan 2006 07:56 am
KitKat, not all overseas drugs are bad. Yours might be from overseas, but if you got them through an American company, they will be fine, due to FDA rulings. Also the Canadian company which I listed above.......Sarah
Completed Stratton/Wheldon regime for aggressive secondary progressive MS in June 2007, after four years, three of which intermittent. Still improving bit by bit and no relapses since finishing treatment.
Good find, Bleu. A while
Good find, Bleu. A while ago there was a programme on the BBC about fake medecines, following on from this article in the London Times,
Saturday July 9th, 2005. So do be careful, especially people in Great Britain and other parts of Europe, where you buy your antibiotics from. If you have to purchase from overseas, tick to places like http://www.drugdelivery.ca/
I also found this World Service programme. still available for download:
http://www.bbc.co.uk/worldservice/specials/1718_pills/page4.shtml
July 09, 2005
Body&Soul
A lack of chemistry
How do you know the tablets you take are real? Vivienne Parry reports on the counterfeit boom
We’ve all heard of dodgy handbags or knock-off designer T-shirts and that Viagra picked up in a nightclub might not be kosher, but few of us would ever dream that the prescription medicines we get from our chemist might be counterfeit. However, the truth is that fake medicines are a growing global problem. The World Health Organisation (WHO) estimates that 10 per cent of all the drugs traded worldwide are now counterfeit with lethal consequences, and Britain is not immune.
You might have assumed that there was some sort of central NHS clearing house for the purchase of medicines. Not so. Hospital trusts and retail pharmacists are free to buy medicines through any legal route to find the best price. Purchasing cheaper drugs through “parallel traders” — companies that source them from other countries where the drugs are substantially cheaper than ours — is good news for them, and 90 per cent of pharmacists do so. But the consignments may pass through dozens of hands before reaching legitimate parallel traders, acquiring anonymity in the process.
Thus parallel traders can be entirely innocent of the provenance of the medicine they sell, and this is when drugs can be switched with fakes or even placebos, the consequences of which can be distressing or sometimes even fatal.
For instance, GlaxoSmithKline (GSK) made a large quantity of low-cost anti-retroviral Aids drugs available to several African countries. The drugs, desperately needed by Africans, and with a value of £18 million, promptly found their way back to Europe, where they were sold at a much higher conventional price in new packaging to European customers, including the NHS, by an innocent parallel trader.
Someone made a killing. Literally. But when the case came to the Court of Appeal, in March 2004, GSK failed to make any progress in preventing it happening again.
These were the real thing in genuine-looking packaging. Another form of counterfeiting is those medicines that are chemically identical to branded medicines, usually sourced from India or China, which have been repackaged to look like the genuine article. They are functional but fake, the medicinal equivalent of the Gucci handbag for a fiver in the market.
But there are also medicines that are bogus, containing little or none of the medication, yet in convincing, high-quality reproductions of the genuine packets, right down to the security holograms. This is the medicinal equivalent of a loaded gun. The criminals who make them are not concerned with consequences, just the huge profits — $32 billion (£18 billion) worldwide is the estimated profit for these high-demand, low-cost items.
Surely we could spot fakes quickly? It’s not as easy as you think. Consider statins, the cholesterol-lowering drugs. If someone who has been taking fake tablets for a year returns to their doctor with a stubbornly high cholesterol level, what would they think? That the patient hadn’t been taking them as directed (very common)? Hadn’t been eating the right food? Perhaps that he was one of the small percentage for whom these drugs don’t work well? The last thing the doctor would suspect is that the tablets were fake. It’s a perfect crime. And before you think this far-fetched, in 2003 American police found 200,000 packets of fake Lipitor — a bestselling statin — which led to the recall of thousands of bottles of the drug.
Even life-saving medicines are at risk of being counterfeited. Streptokinase is used to treat heart attacks. A German investigation of 21 formulations of Streptokinase bought across the world, and published in the European Heart Journal two months ago, revealed that only three were full strength; one brand had just 20 per cent of required activity.
And, in a harrowing film for BBC Two, This World: Bad Medicine, to be shown on Tuesday, an American paediatric heart team working in Nigeria discovered that they were using fake adrenalin when children began to die.
But we’d spot something like that in Britain, wouldn’t we? Not necessarily: these sort of drugs are being given by doctors and pharmacists to critically ill patients, in whom death is frequent. Sub-standard counterfeit drugs wouldn’t immediately spring to mind as a cause of death. And since medicines may pass through 30 or more separate middlemen before being dispensed, bad gets mixed in with good and the chances of discovery are reduced further.
I asked an expert in counterfeit medicines, Graham Satchwell, an ex-policeman and the principal investigator in the GSK Aids drugs case, how much fake medicine was circulating in Britain. “We just don’t know,” he said. “That’s because there is no method in the UK (or much of Europe either) that can identify fake pharmaceuticals before they are dispensed.” And even if there are adverse reactions to sub-standard drugs, there is nowhere to report them to.
He points out that all the findings of counterfeit medicines in Britain to date have been accidental. “If you don’t look, you won’t find anything.”
The drugs most at risk of counterfeiting are lifestyle drugs, such as impotence medicines Viagra or Cialis, and obesity drugs such as Reductil. But the top 30 most counterfeited drugs worldwide include almost all the anti-retrovirals used to treat Aids, many antibiotics, as well as expensive drugs used to treat cancer and infertility.
Pharmaceutical companies are reluctant to openly discuss counterfeiting for fear of causing loss of confidence in their products or of potential litigation. And they are not legally obliged to report counterfeiting if they discover it. The criminal law is no help either. There is not even a specific crime of “counterfeiting medicines”. So when Allen Valentine, whose factory in Wembley, North London, was discovered to be churning out huge quantities of fake Viagra and Diazepam, was convicted earlier this year, he could be charged only with the conspiracy to supply Class C drugs and contravention of the Trades Mark Act and the Medicines Act. The UK’s lenient laws and high percentage of parallel imports make us a prime target for criminals.
The response of the Medicines and Healthcare Regulatory Agency (MHRA) to Satchwell, after seeing his searing report on counterfeit medicines in Britain, available on the Interpol website, was a frosty: “The MHRA in no way endorses this publication or supports the opinions represented.” Head in sand is not a good way of dealing with this problem, although pitching the MHRA against well-resourced, highly organised criminal gangs is a bit of an unequal match.
To check whether a medicine is genuine, you either have to track it every time it changes hands (almost impossible) or when it is dispensed. A private company, Aegate, has been set up, in London, to provide independent secure authentication at the point of dispensing. As its spokesman, Alison Williams, points out: “The food industry has used barcodes for years to identify products within the food supply chain so they can be tracked back, yet the pharmaceutical industry doesn’ t do this.” Aegate supports giving each item a unique serial number, either through barcodes or the more expensive option of radio frequency identification tags, depending on the product.
In a pilot scheme involving 50 types of pharmacists (including hospitals, high street and GP dispensers) and several manufacturers, Aegate trialled a system in which pharmacists were able to scan product serial codes and check back with the manufacturer through an internet link before dispensing. It has proved popular and has the added benefit of cutting down dispensing errors.
It’s folly to assume that this sort of thing happens only in developing countries. The profits are just too mouthwatering for criminals to ignore. Britain urgently needs to institute both spot checks of medicine quality and to put systems in place which prevent counterfeit medicines gaining any place here.
This World: Bad Medicine is on BBC Two, at 9pm, on Tuesday; Vivienne Parry is the author of The Truth about Hormones (Atlantic, £9.99)
GLOBAL DUDS
The World Health Organisation (WHO) estimates that 25 per cent of medicines traded in developing countries are fake; 10 per cent worldwide.
In Lagos, Nigeria, 80 per cent of drugs in one market were bogus.
Last month, 11 people were jailed in China for selling fake Heptodin, used to treat hepatitis C.
The Chinese Government attributes 192,000 deaths a year to fake medicines.
In Cambodia, 70 per cent of the malarial drug artensuate is fake.
The WHO estimates 200,000 deaths a year from malaria could be avoided if the medicines were real.
A fake meningitis vaccine distributed in Niger during an epidemic is estimated to have caused 2,500 deaths.
In Britain, 6,000 bottles of counterfeit gastric ulcer drugs were found in 1994.
In 2003, a factory capable of producing half a million pills a day was found in Wembley.
In 2004, a survey by the Royal Pharmaceutical Society discovered that 50 per cent of impotence drugs sold online were fake.
Completed Stratton/Wheldon regime for aggressive secondary progressive MS in June 2007, after four years, three of which intermittent. Still improving bit by bit and no relapses since finishing treatment.