COUNTERFEIT MEDICINES
While the issue of counterfeit medicines is not new, there seems to be a growing prevalence of incidents reported by the media. The following articles highlight some of the reported cases, and dangers, of counterfeit medicines.
(Pharmatimes - Dec. 17, 2008) European Union (EU) customs officials have seized around 34 million counterfeit pills over the last two months, mostly originating from India, Pakistan and China.
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(CBS - Nov. 28, 2008) Counterfeit products run the gamut -- and can cause serious harm to you or your family. Items such as fake medicines, car parts, electrical products and more have been confiscated by government officials, and consumers need to know what to look for and how to protect themselves.
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(Reuters - Africa -- Nov. 27, 2008) Nigerian health officials on Thursday scrambled to test more children's drugs after the number of infants killed by tainted teething syrup rose to 28.
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(Bloomberg News - Nov. 17, 2008) Interpol seized more than $6.65 million of counterfeit medicines against malaria, HIV and tuberculosis in Southeast Asia and made 27 arrests, disrupting the region's fake drug trade for the second time in three years.
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(Awareness Times - Nov. 5, 2008) Fake, counterfeit and substandard drugs worth over ninety million Leones were destroyed by the Pharmacy Board of Sierra Leone (PBSL) at the northern headquarter city of Makeni in the Bombali District. The problem of counterfeit drugs, the Registrar said, is not unique to Sierra Leone as according to him, "40% of all drugs sold in Africa are counterfeit or substandard".
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(The Independent - Nov. 2, 2008) Packets of fake pills are being smuggled into high-street chemists and sold as real medicines that prevent heart attacks or fight cancer, putting the lives of millions of British patients at risk.
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(Daily Nation - Oct. 17, 2008) Medical practitioners have asked members of Parliament to promptly enact the Counterfeit Bill, 2008, to save lives that could be lost due to the use of counterfeit medicine.
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(AfricaAsiaNews.com - Oct. 2, 2008) Customs authorities at Brussels airport have seized over two million counterfeit medical pills from India which were bound for Africa, the biggest such seizure ever in Europe, officials said Thursday.
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