Credit: Pharma News
Credit: Pharma News

Over 50% of Drugs in Circulation are Fake and Substandard — Pharmacists Raise Alarm Over 5 Million Unregistered Drug-Selling Outlets Across Nigeria

The Association of Community Pharmacists of Nigeria (ACPN) has raised fresh concerns about the existence of nearly five million unregistered drug-selling outfits across the country, warning that the unchecked proliferation of these vendors poses a severe threat to public health.

Ezeh Ambrose Igwekamma, the national chairman of ACPN, who issued the warning in a press statement, said Nigeria is witnessing a dangerous resurgence in the circulation of fake and substandard medicines.

According to him, it is driven in part by the operations of unregulated drug sellers in both urban centres and remote villages. These outfits, he said, operate largely outside the oversight of regulatory agencies and remain a major conduit for counterfeit drugs and unwholesome products.

Credit: News Central TV
Credit: News Central TV

“Our usually reliable and dependable research-based efforts indicate that we are back to the days of over 50% of drugs in circulation being fake and substandard as against official figures hovering between 13% and 15%”, he said.

He cited historical studies conducted by the Federal Ministry of Health and the World Health Organisation (WHO) as far back as 1988, which found that a third of drugs in circulation were fake, 7% of which proved fatal. Further reviews in 1998 exposed that nearly 50% of fake drugs came from open drug markets, while 33% were traced to Patent Medicine Vendors. Fatalities from fake drugs reached nearly 13%, with another 10.8% resulting in treatment failure.

Despite regulatory strides in the early 2000s, particularly under the leadership of the late Dora Akunyili at NAFDAC, Igwekamma lamented a reversal in progress over the past five years.

READ ALSO: NAFDAC Uncovers Counterfeit Drugs, Repackaged Medications Sold Inside Lagos Market

He attributed the resurgence of counterfeit drugs to the dormancy of the Federal and State Task Forces charged with monitoring the drug distribution chain, and the inadequate enforcement of existing laws.

“Despite some modest efforts by NAFDAC, the influx of fake drugs and unwholesome food and drinks has surged very significantly in the last five years when the Federal Task Force and the equivalent State Task Forces have almost become moribund with negligible regulatory output.”

“The NASS must, as a matter of urgency, amend the existing Fake Drug and Unwholesome Food Act to become a much more potent Act of Parliament”, he said.

READ ALSO: NAFDAC Evacuates 50 Trailer Loads of Counterfeit Drugs From Onitsha Drug Market

He also warned about a growing wave of fake drinks entering the Nigerian market, which he described as “a gargantuan tens-of-billion-naira business championed by modern-day merchants of death.”

“I call on all community pharmacists, healthcare professionals, industry leaders, and development partners to unite efforts to shape a more resilient, innovative, and people-centred future for pharmacy practice in Nigeria”, he urged. #Pharma

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