Tag: pharmaceutical

  • May & Baker wins award for quality in pharmaceutical manufacturing

    May & Baker, Nigeria Plc has capped its numerous achievements in the pharmaceutical manufacturing business with an award of excellence in high quality and safety in pharmaceutical manufacturing. The award was presented to the company at the 2016 Industry and Commerce Awards organised by the Lagos Chamber of Commerce and Industry held in Lagos recently.

    Presenting the award to the company, the Speaker, Lagos State House of Assembly, Hon. Mudashiru Obasa commended the company for showing the way for pharmaceutical manufacturing in Nigeria.

    The organisers of the award noted that May & Baker Nigeria Plc, has been synonymous with excellence since it started its operations in Nigeria in 1944 as the first pharmaceutical company in the country.

    As Nigeria’s first pharmaceutical company, May & Baker has for over seven decades, remained a key player in the nation’s healthcare industry. Generations of Nigerians have come to rely on the company for health support. The company’s reputation for quality is legendary. Every May & Baker product picked off from the shelf has a guarantee and stamp of quality that has been the hallmark of the company in Nigeria.

  • U.S. building pharmaceutical warehouse in Lagos

    U.S. building pharmaceutical warehouse in Lagos

    The United States Agency for International Development (USAID) and the Global Fund for AIDS, Tuberculosis and Malaria (GFATM), are building a modern pharmaceutical warehouse in Lagos, with an innovative technology called a ‘warehouse-in-a-box’.

    USAID’s Country Director Mr Mike Harvey said the project, which costs N1 billion ($5 million), would double the storage capacity of the existing warehouse and make it easier for the Federal Ministry of Health to buy, store, track and distribute drugs to health care centres.

    He spoke at the warehouse’s ground breaking at the Federal Medical Store in Lagos.

    Harvey said over 7,000 health facilities across Nigeria would receive commodities from the two new warehouses.

    Besides, the warehouses would also reduce the cost and time of transporting live-saving medicines and equipment to all parts of the country.

    He said: “Building this warehouse in Lagos aligns with one of the six central technical components of the Federal Government’s ‘Saving One Million Lives Initiative’.

    Harvey said the U.S. government provided N800 million ($4million) while GFATM contributed N200 million ($1million), adding that Nigeria provided the land.

    The U.S. government, Harvey said, was trying to ensure that expectant mothers access drug at health clinics.

    Acting U.S. Consul-General in Nigeria Dehab Ghebreab said the facility would be part of a network of warehouses the U.S. government was supporting through the President’s Emergency Plan for AIDS Relief (PEPFAR) in Lagos.

    She said a similar project was inaugurated in Abuja in February.

    “Our investment here will help ensure that Nigeria has the warehouse infrastructure that meets international standard to efficiently store medicines and other pharmaceutical products to provide good health care and save lives.

    “As a mother, I understand and appreciate the importance of accessing quality medicine. If my child gets ill at night or in school, I want my child to be seen immediately by a health practitioner or a doctor at a health facility and be given medicine needed to cure him. I am sure every parent wants that.

    “I also want to know that my neighbour, who is in labour, gets drugs that prevent post-partum haemorrhage (blood loss after child-bearing); that her newborn baby will be protected from cord infection. Additionally, I want to know that the young family across the street has bed-nets they need to prevent malaria,” she said.

    She said the inauguration of the facility would save many lives, adding that good national health was the foundation that accelerates national development.

    Mrs. Ghebreab said many clinics experience shortages.

    The Permanent Secretary, Federal Ministry of Health, Mr Linus Awute, said storage of medicines had been a challenge for the country.

    According to him, medicines and other health commodities were special items that require appropriate storage conditions.

    He said the stores in Lagos serve as the only central storage hub for health products procured by the ministry, local and international agencies and non-governmental organisations (NGOs) working in partnership with the ministry.

  • PSN urges research on Ebola

    Worried  by the outbreak of Ebola virus disease, the Pharmaceutical Society of Nigeria (PSN) has urged researchers to conduct a study to identify a vaccine for the prevention of the disease.

    In recent reviews by the PSN research and study group, it was discovered that some previous work had been conducted through these reflected studies:

    • High-titeredhyperimmune horse anti-Ebola serum has been protective in baboons experimentally challenged with Ebola (1).

    • Monoclonal antibodies from the marrow of Ebola survivors (2)

    • A potential, promising vaccine that offered considerable protection against Ebola to guinea pigs (3).

    • In mice used as a model for Ebola infections, a series of nucleoside analogue inhibitors of S-adenosylhomocysteine hydrolase provided protection against Ebola-Zaire when administered within 2 days of Ebola-Zaire infection.

    Three companies, the US government and the Public Health Agency of Canada are behind the experimental drug.

    “ZMapp was first identified as a drug candidate in January 2014 and has not yet been evaluated for safety in humans. As such, very little of the drug is currently available”.

    Promoters of “ZMapp and its partners are co-operating with appropriate government agencies to increase production as quickly as possible.”

    ZMapp is a drug still in its experimental stage being produced by Mapp Biopharmaceuticals in collaboration with LeafBio (San Diego, CA), Defyrus Inc. (Toronto, Canada), the U.S. government and the Public Health Agency of Canada (PHAC).  This drug is composed of three humanised monoclonal antibodies manufactured in plants specifically the plant Nicotiana which is commonly used in tobacco production.  Genes of the necessary antibodies are fused to the tobacco genes, infecting the tobacco with the virus. The plant then produces wanted antibodies that are subsequently separated from the plant when it is ground up. The body’s immune system can vigilantly fight off the virus once the antibodies from the serum are present in the blood system. The treatment offers an artificial immune response to the virus, and the lab-made antibodies then fight the infection by binding to the Ebola virus. Since it is still in the experimental stage, it has not yet been tested in humans for safety or effectiveness and more study is needed.

    ZMapp is not a vaccine and is being designed solely for treatment of the Ebola disease; however the NIH (National Institute of Health) in the US is working on developing a vaccine. It is also supporting the Crucell biopharmaceutical company in its development of an Ebola/Marburg vaccine as well as Profectus Biosciences in its development of an Ebola vaccine.

    Additionally, NIH and the Thomas Jefferson University are collaborating to develop a candidate Ebola vaccine based on the established rabies vaccine. Zmapp has yet to enter Phase 1 testing but has shown some success in treating Dr Kent Brantley and Nancy Writebol who contracted the virus while working in Africa. Although neither patient is cured each has shown considerable improvement in their condition.

    The FDA has recently authorised the use of a diagnostic test for Ebola developed by the department of defense called the DoD EZ1 Real time RT-PCR Assay to help determine if aid workers and responders are infected.  Until experimental drugs pass clinical trials and are available for human treatment, the best treatment for individuals infected with the virus is supportive care. This includes, providing fluids, maintaining blood pressure, providing oxygen as needed, replacing lost blood and treating other infections that develop.

  • Ekiti seals eight illegal pharmaceutical stores

    EKITI State Government has sealed off eight patent medicine and Pharmaceuticals stores for operating illegally in the state.

    The Monitoring and Inspection Unit of the Pharmaceutical Services Department of the State Ministry of Health which embarked on an inspection tour of Emure, Ise, Ikere and Ado Ekiti communities sealed the shops for offenses ranging from operating unregistered medicine stores to failure to renew registration of their outlets.

    Speaking in Ado-Ekiti, capital of the state, on the development, the Commissioner for Health, Professor Olusola Fasubaa, noted that the proprietors of the affected shops failed to comply with the operational guidelines in respect of the sale of medicine.

    He stated that some of them were also found to be in possession of unethical drugs.

    The commissioner added that some of the shop owners do not have license at all while the others have been operating for years without renewal.

    He warned that owners of the sealed shops that reopen without proper authorisation would be made to face the wrath of the law.

    Reiterating the commitment of the state government to ensuring a

    healthy society, Fasubaa said that the present

    administration would leave no stone unturned towards streamlining drug distribution in the state.

     

  • Aids deaths and the pharmaceutical industry

    Aids deaths and the pharmaceutical industry

    Several years ago, I began to learn about what I would come to regard as one of the great crimes in human history, whereby millions of people in Africa and elsewhere were cynically allowed to die of AIDS, while western governments and pharmaceutical companies blocked access to available low-cost medication. The outrage I felt as I discovered the details of this story was exceeded only by a deep sense of betrayal mixed with shame for not having known more about it in the first place.

    Today, I find those feelings mirrored in audiences who see my film, Fire in the Blood, which, incredibly, is the first comprehensive account of this horrendous atrocity and how it was eventually halted. As anyone who knows anything about pharmaceuticals will tell you, the name of the game is monopoly. In the case of medicine, monopolies emanate from patents. Typically a patent lasts for 20 years, but drug companies are expert at getting them extended. As long as the monopoly is in place, the company selling the drug can essentially charge whatever they want for it. Pricing is unrelated either to the cost of production (normally a few pennies per pill) or how much was spent in development, but a simple calculation of how to maximise revenue. Though most western countries do have price controls, these typically only keep price levels consistent with other comparable countries, so restraints are minimal.

    Why does society accept this? The narrative the industry has been immensely successful in selling is that it spends vast sums of money on research and development, that this R&D is very high risk, and that monopolies and high prices are a “necessary evil” needed to finance innovation of new medicines. These arguments do not hold up under scrutiny. 84% of worldwide funding for drug discovery research comes from government and public sources, against just 12% from pharma companies, which on average spend 19 times more on marketing than they do on basic research (paywalled link). When we screened our film at the Sundance festival last month, audiences were dismayed to learn how much of their tax money goes to discover medicines which are then sold back to them at monopoly prices nearly half of all Americans surveyed say they have trouble affording.

    In developing countries, where people typically pay for medicines out of pocket, the situation is far worse. Pharmaceutical company representatives have told me that in (relatively prosperous) South Africa, they price their products for the top 5% of the market, while in India their customer base might be just the top 1.5%. The rest of the population is of no interest. At the same time, drug companies are working tooth-and-nail to cut off supplies of lower-cost generic drugs originating in countries such as India, Brazil and Thailand, to make sure that they don’t miss out on a single customer who could possibly pay their sky-high prices.

    At the industry’s behest, governments in the US and Europe use a dizzying variety of trade mechanisms, threats of sanctions and so on to curtail supplies of affordable medicine in the global south. The potential impact of these measures in human terms is nothing less than cataclysmic. As Peter Mugyenyi, director of Africa’s largest AIDS treatment centre, says: “We are on standby awaiting another bloodbath.”

    To any suggestion that the prevailing system of monopolies on medicine is hugely inefficient, immoral and unsustainable, industry apologists contend that “it’s tried and tested”, whereas any proposed alternative would represent a massive gamble. This, again, is totally disingenuous. A vital first step is to raise the bar for granting patents: 90% of drug patents have no meaningful clinical advantages for patients, but nonetheless impede access.

    More significantly, for 70 years Canada had a system prohibiting monopolies on medicine, where patent holders received a statutory royalty on sales of generic equivalents. This maintained profit incentives for innovation, while ensuring the public was not held to ransom by monopoly pricing (it did not, however, produce the windfall profits to which the industry is addicted – so US trade negotiators had it killed under Nafta).

    As unthinkable as it may seem, the horror that saw millions of people die unnecessarily of HIV and AIDS while being denied safe and effective generic medicines produced at a fraction of the prices brand-name companies were charging, could be a mere taste of things to come.