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Saturday April 27, 2024

60 essential medicines vanish from market

By M. Waqar Bhatti
July 21, 2022

KARACHI: In an alarming situation, around 60 essential medicines, including suicide-prevention drug, have vanished from the market due to increase in their cost of production, prompting psychiatrists to fear for high suicide cases in the country.

“All the brands of Lithium Carbonate are not available in the market for last two to three months. This is the most effective medicine for the treatment of several psychiatric illnesses including bipolar disorder. If this drug is not made available any soon, many people with psychiatric illness may commit suicide”, renowned psychiatrist and former president of Pakistan Psychiatric Society (PPS) told The News.

Similarly, some other essential medicines, including methylphenidate for the treatment of attention deficit hyperactivity disorder (ADHD) in children and clonazepam drops drops and tablets for epilepsy in children and adults, are also not available in the market, physicians and pharmacists said.

Several other psychiatrists at Pakistan Institute of Medical Sciences (PIMS), Shifa International Hospital Islamabad and Mayo Hospital Lahore as well as psychiatrists in Peshawar also confirmed that relatives of patients diagnosed with bipolar disorder were moving from pillar to post for Lithium Carbonate but none of its brands were available in the market.

“There are some alternatives to this medicine but they are not effective as Lithium Carbonate, said Iqbal Afridi, adding, “The pharmaceutical company and the Drug Regulatory Authority of Pakistan (DRAP) were requested to ensure availability of this drug as hundreds of patients are suffering due to shortage of this important medicine.” Another senior pharmacist Salwa Ahsan from Islamabad said the medicine Lithium Carbonate was not available throughout the country, adding that the raw materials cost had gone way up and companies were no more manufacturing them.

“Nine pharmaceutical companies used to produce these drugs but now none of the companies is manufacturing them. Officials in the local pharmaceutical industry claimed over 60 medicines including those used for the treatment of Tuberculosis, psychiatric illnesses, neurological disorders including Epilepsy, anti-depressant medicines, anti-coagulants (blood thinners), pain-killers, anti-hypertensive and several other essential medicines are not available in the community pharmacies.

A list of medicines available with The News and survey of several pharmacies in Karachi, Lahore and Islamabad revealed that several important medicines for the treatment of TB, epilepsy, Parkinson’s disease, depression, cardiovascular disease and others were not available as pharmaceutical companies were not manufacturing them due to high cost of production.

“Some important medicines for the treatment and management of psychiatric disorders, especially the one for the treatment of attention deficit hyperactivity disorder (ADHD) in children, are also not available in the market”, a senior community pharmacist Arif Aslam said. ‘Rupee’s devaluation - a big factor behind high cost of production: PPMA’

Qazi Mansoor Dilawar, the Chairman of Pakistan Pharmaceutical Manufacturers’ Association (PPMA) conceded that several medicines were not available in the local market, as their cost of production had increased to the extent where it was not viable for the manufacturers to produce the drugs and sell them on less price than the cost of production.

“Rupee’s devaluation is the biggest factor behind increasing cost of production of many essential medicines. Cost of raw material is increasing while utilities, transportation and other costs have made it impossible for the pharmaceutical companies to manufacture many essential medicines,” Qazi Mansoor Dilawar said.

He said unless the prices of the medicines are increased 30 to 40 percent by the government or prices of medicines are deregulated, the unavailability of medicines would continue and feared that more companies could stop manufacturing several more medicines in the days to come.

Officials in the Drug Regulatory Authority of Pakistan (DRAP) conceded that only eight medicines were short in the market due to supply chain issues, including problems in release of quota of controlled medicines, adding that their committee on shortage of medicines was trying its best to make these medicines available in the country.

“Due to issues related to release of quota of controlled medicines and substances, some eight medicines are not available in the market but our officials are working with ministry of narcotics control and pharmaceutical companies to end their shortage and make them available to people”, a senior official of DRAP told The News.