On July 23, 2008, the first National Dialogue on Counterfeit Products closed at Alisa hotel, and its sponsors: the Food & Drugs Board, the EU BizClim Facility, and the Institute of Packaging (the last two acting through the Coalition Against Counterfeiting & Illicit Trade) set about to deliver on the commitments made in the final communiqué.
The communiqué identified 4 major areas in which significant improvement will lead to significant results in the fight against counterfeiting in Ghana. These areas are:
- Sub-regional cooperation across West Africa;
- Inter-Agency collaboration within Ghana;
- The Development of a national standard on technology; and
- The formation of a National Anti-Counterfeiting Task Force to harmonise existing regulatory frameworks.
- During a meningitis epidemic in Niger in 1995, more than 50,000 people were inoculated with fake vaccines resulting in 2,500 deaths. The vaccines were received as a gift from a country which thought they were safe.
- 89 children died in Haiti in 1995 and 30 infants died in India in 1998 due to the consumption of paracetamol cough syrup prepared with diethylene glycol (a toxic chemical used in antifreeze).
- In 2001, in South-East Asia, a Wellcome Trust study revealed that 38% of 104 anti-malarial drugs on sale in pharmacies did not contain any active ingredients.
- In Cambodia, in 1999, at least 30 people died after taking counterfeit anti-malarials prepared with sulphadoxine-pyrimethamine (an older, less effective anti-malarial) which were sold as artesunate.
- A study by the US based Centre for Medicines in the Public Interest predicts that counterfeit drug sales will reach US$ 75 billion globally in 2010, an increase of more than 90% from 2005.
- Many countries in Africa and parts of Asia and Latin America have areas where more that 30% of the medicines on sale can be counterfeit, while other developing markets have less than 10%; overall, a reasonable range is between 10% and 30%
- Many of the former Soviet republics have a proportion of counterfeit medicines which is above 20% of market value — this falls into the developing country range
- Medicines purchased over the Internet from sites that conceal their physical address are counterfeit in over 50% of cases.
- In Angola, according to the National Department of Intellectual Copyright Crime of the Economic Police, approximately 70% of medicines used by the Angolan population were forgeries.
- In Nigeria, the Ebonyi State Task Force on Counterfeit and Fake Drugs reported that approximately 48% of goods and drugs imported into the country were substandard or counterfeit.
- In 2003, The Philippine's Bureau of Food and Drug (BFAD) reported that 30% of drug store outlets visited by food and drug deregulation officers carry and sell counterfeit drugs.
- An AFM study in 2007 discovered that as much as 35% of the anti-malarials found in several countries in Africa were sub-therapeutic (i.e. sub-standard).
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