India to spend $79.6 million to strengthen drug regulatory system
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[February 04, 2023]
NEW DELHI (Reuters) - India will spend $79.6 million on
strengthening its drug regulatory system, the health minister said on
Friday, after the World Health Organization raised concerns about
domestically produced cough syrups being linked to the death of 89
children in two countries.
India is known as the "pharmacy of the world" and its pharmaceuticals
exports have more than doubled over the past decade to $24.5 billion in
2021-22. The death of at least 70 children in Gambia and 19 children in
Uzbekistan last year have dented that image.
Government data shared by Health Minister Mansukh Mandaviya on Friday
showed that out of nearly 89,000 drug samples tested in 2021-22 by
states and territories, more than 2,500 did not meet standards and close
to 380 were declared spurious or adulterated.
Mandaviya said the federal government has allocated funds to his
ministry for measures including setting up new drug testing laboratories
and upgrading existing ones.
"The government has taken various regulatory measures to ensure the
quality of medicines in the country," he said in a written reply to a
question in parliament.
It was not immediately clear when the funds would be provided nor how
they would be used. The health ministry did not immediately respond to a
Reuters request seeking clarity.
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India's Chemicals and Fertilizers
Minister Mansukh Mandaviya, who is also Union Minister of Health and
Family Welfare, gestures during his interview with Reuters at his
office in New Delhi, India, July 15, 2022. REUTERS/Anushree Fadnavis
Last month the WHO called for
"immediate and concerted action" to protect children from
contaminated medicines.
The WHO, the U.S. Food and Drug Administration and foreign
regulatory authorities have launched an investigation into the
source of contaminated cough syrups that have killed more than 300
children in Africa and Asia.
The companies whose syrups were linked to the death of children have
either denied that their products were contaminated or declined to
comment while investigations are ongoing.
In the case of Gambia, Indian government inspectors found no
contamination in test samples of the syrup linked to the death of
children.
($1 = 81.8690 Indian rupees)
(Reporting by Shivam Patel in New Delhi; Editing by Kirsten Donovan)
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