He recently called “a world press conference” in Abuja where he proposed a new law, advocating for the death penalty or life-jail term for manufacturers and distributors of fake drugs, especially in situations where it is determined that such medicines caused death or injury.
Wow …the death penalty!
This has led us to have a think at the Nigerian pharmaceatical “market”.
This article in 234Next describes the Idumota open drug market, the Sabongeri market of Kano and the Onitsha Head Bridge Market, which was reopened in 2008 after it was closed by NAFDAC in 2007 for drug counterfeiting. All three are still fledging OPEN markets where anyone can walk in and buy the most potent medicines….anyone!
Do not ask me if these medicines are kept at the temperatures many of them have to be kept in to preserve their efficacy. In fact, the the same article outlines a report by the University of Lagos College of Medicine, showing that most of these medicines failed a sensitivity test.
Are all the traders in Idumota open drug market, the Sabongeri market of Kano and the Onitsha Head Bridge Market facing the death penalty if the medicines they sell, lead to a therapeutic failure and death? Wow…
Yes, of course we advocate for a sanitisation of the medicine, industry in Nigeria and yes we do hope that one day we will find the leadership to provide this, but we suggest that we need to move beyond world press conferences! This is just one step ahead of calling the press together to burn medicines in public, then proclaiming across several newspaper pages that they had successfully burnt drugs worth millions of naira. This is still being done by NAFDAC in 2009...in 2009!
What are our governments and NAFDAC doing to provide institutional alternatives to these markets? We celebrated the innovative idea of a modern drug store to be handled by professionals such as the one built by the Segun Oni-led government of Ekiti state opened by the NAFDAC boss himself!. How many have been built since then? Why is the only one in the country in Ado Ekiti…and not in Onitsha, Kano or Idumota?
A lot is made of Professor Dora Akunyili’s successes at NAFDAC rightly so!
Very few Nigerians had heard about this agency before Professor Akunyili’s tenure. It was at the same level as several other parastatals of the Ministry of Health in the late nineties such as NPHCDA, NPI, that were barely doing more than paying salaries.
During every advertising break while the Network news is being broadcast, we watch NAFDAC public announcements warning citizens not to buy fake drugs, and to report those that do.
Nigerians are doing their best. But the era of celebrating individuals and awards has passed. We desire strong institutions. We do not want to see NAFDAC officials gathering a few mobile police men in drug burning orgies…
Never doubt that a small group of thoughtful committed people can change the world; indeed it is the only thing that ever has…Margaret Mead