Pharma fraud

Pharma fraud is a term to describe several illegal activities involving the manufacturing, marketing, and distribution of pharmaceuticals.

History

Because of a lack of regulation and enforcement, the quality, safety and efficacy of both imported and locally manufactured medicines in many developing countries cannot be guaranteed. Subsequently, smuggling and illegal importation of drugs are common. Substandard and counterfeit drugs are then not only sold in these countries but also exported or re-exported.[1] According to the World Customs Organization, counterfeit drugs are a $200 billion a year industry that kills hundreds of thousands of people annually.[2]

The phrase "pharma fraud" was proposed by Ellen 't Hoen of MSF, during the 61st World Health Assembly meeting in Geneva. She proposed the phrase in response to controversies over the use of the term "counterfeiting" in draft WHA resolutions, to describe activities that often involved health risks from unsafe, substandard or fake medicines. The use of the term counterfeit was problematic and inaccurate to describe all of these activities, and health experts were seeking a new term to collectively describe these harmful activities.

Definition

Pharma fraud refers to:

  • Trade involving counterfeit drugs: the practice of falsely claiming to be an authorized product of another firm, including but not limited to the use of another firm's mark to deceive the public.[3]
  • Deliberately manufacturing and marketing products that do not contain the required active ingredients or not contain the right amount of active ingredient.[4][5]
  • Packaging and labeling of drugs that make false claims regarding medical properties, including but not limited to the active medical ingredients, the date of expiration of products, or the methods of storage.[6]
  • Marketing of products using false claims regarding the efficacy of the product which will lead to the irrational use[7][8] of medicines or deliberately failing to provide information about safety concerns of the product.
  • Deliberate suppression of data, including evidence from clinical trials, that reveal adverse effects of the medicine.[9][10]

Examples

In response to a meningitis epidemic in Niger from February to May 1995 (41,000 cases reported), the Niger authorities organized an extensive vaccination campaign. In March 1995, Niger received a donation of 88,000 Pasteur Mérieux and SmithKline Beecham vaccines from neighboring Nigeria. A Médecins Sans Frontières (MSF) team working with local health authorities noticed that the vaccines from Nigeria had an unusual appearance and inquiries were made. Pasteur Mérieux laboratories confirmed that the batch numbers and the expiration dates did not correspond to their manufacturing records. The drugs supplied by these companies had been substituted with counterfeit drugs. Tests carried out found no traces of active product, which confirmed that they were false. Bottles and labels were, however, copied to perfection. According to estimates, around 60,000 persons were inoculated with false vaccines out of a total 5 million vaccinated during the campaign.[11]

References

  1. "Substandard and counterfeit medicines (Fact sheet N°275)". Media centre. World Health Organization. November 2003. Archived from the original on 2012-04-28. Retrieved 12 March 2012.
  2. Irish, John (10 June 2010). "Customs group to fight $200 bln bogus drug industry". Paris, France: Reuters.
  3. Sixty-First World Health Assembly (7 April 2008), Counterfeit medical products: Report by the Secretariat (A61/16, Provisional agenda item 11.13) (PDF), World Health Organisation, archived from the original (PDF) on 22 April 2009, Report by the Secretariat, A61/16, 7 April 2008.
  4. Wellcome Trust (13 February 2008). "Fake Malaria Drugs Made In China: Tracking Down The Threat To Global Health". ScienceDaily.
  5. Newton, Paul N; Fernandez, Facundo M; Plançon, Aline; Mildenhall, Dallas C; Green, Michael D; Li, Ziyong; Christophel, Eva Maria; Phanouvong, Souly; Howells, Stephen; McIntosh, Eric; Laurin, Paul; Blum, Nancy; Hampton, Christina Y; Faure, Kevin; Nyadong, Leonard; Soong, C. W. Ray; Santoso, Budiono; Wang, Zhiguang; Newton, John; Palmer, Kevin (12 February 2008). "A Collaborative Epidemiological Investigation into the Criminal Fake Artesunate Trade in South East Asia". PLOS Med. PLOS. 5 (2): e32. doi:10.1371/journal.pmed.0050032. PMC 2235893. PMID 18271620.
  6. Panosian Dunavan, Claire (9 May 2008). "Drug safety crisis hits home: Facing the tainted heparin threat and other pharmaceutical concerns, patients must speak up — and the government must crack down". The Baltimore Sun. Archived from the original on 16 May 2008.
  7. Laing, R.O. (1990). "Rational Drug Use: An Unsolved Problem". Tropical Doctor. 20 (3): 101–103. doi:10.1177/004947559002000303. PMID 2219416. S2CID 30471552.
  8. Rational use of medicines: progress in implementing the WHO medicines strategy, Report by the Secretariat (EB118/6, Executive Board, 118th Session) (PDF), 11 May 2006, archived from the original (PDF) on 20 May 2008
  9. Silverman, Ed (3 July 2005). "2000 study by Merck showed Vioxx risk Results not given to FDA". Star-Ledger.
  10. Mehrbanm, Morse (July–August 1998), "Failure to disclose adverse health consequences of a product constitutes health fraud", NCRHI Newsletter
  11. Pécoul, B; Chirac, P; Trouiller, P; Pinel, J (27 January 1999). "Access to essential drugs in poor countries: a lost battle?". Journal of the American Medical Association. 281 (4): 361–367. doi:10.1001/jama.281.4.361. PMID 9929090.
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