Tag: Pharmacists

  • Insurer urges pharmacists to collaborate

    Pharmacists have been urged to team up to develop the industry.

    The Group Managing Director, Mutual Benefit Assurance, Dr Akin Ogunbiyi, gave the charge at the bi-monthly meeting of the Association of Industrial Pharmacists of Nigeria (NAIP) in Lagos.

    He said pharmacists could pull resources to boost local production of raw materials rather than relying on import.

    Ogunbiyi was the guest speaker at the event with the theme, 2015 Economic Outlook: Exploring strategic options for business.

    He said about 85 per cent of active pharmaceutical ingredients (APIs) is imported.

    This, he said, should not be because there are investable funds to boost development in the sector.

    The Federal Government, he said, is saddled with public institutions, and as such private investors are critical to the development of the sector.

    He charged pharmacists to see opportunities in the industry, adding that the country is the number one supplier of pharmaceutical products to the sub-Saharan region.

    Ogunbiyi said with the way the dollar is rising daily, over-the-counter (OTC) and prescription drugs would be out of reach of the common man. The falling of the naira is affecting the sector, adding that one cannot ask the pharmacists to pay more on products.

    The solution, he said, is that they should come together to tackle the problem.

    “We have the Pharmaceutical Society of Nigeria (PSN). They should be able to assist in that particular area to reduce the cost,’’ he added.

    He said the sector could attract investments, stressing that the people  with investable funds should be brought in.

    “All the industry needs to do is show seriousness. They should come up with business plans and ideas. Then, the funds will come,” he said.

    Ogunbiyi said pharmacists should contribute to the country’s micro economic development.

    “It is a critical time when people should look beyond the country’s economic main stay, which is oil, to research into other areas,” he said.

    The pharmaceutical industry, he said, has not done enough to build its capacity, especially in local manufacturing.

     

  • Pharmacists counsel  students on drug production

    Pharmacists counsel students on drug production

    Managing Director of Mopson Pharmaceuticals, Dr Paul Oyebanjo, said he is sad that despite producing pharmacists yearly, Nigeria still depends on imports for simple drugs like cough syrup.

    Oyebanjo, said this while delivering a paper titled: Industry “Pharmacy” at a lecture organised by the Nigeria Association of Pharmacists in Academia for 300, 400 and 500-Level students of the faculty at the University of Lagos (UNILAG).

    The paper was drawn from the theme: “Practice grand rounds”.

    The pharmacist lamented that cough mixtures still come from China and India – with the only raw material that comes from Nigeria being water.

    “Nigeria imports everything.  If we still import all these products, it shows that we have benefited nothing from people who have graduated from this field,” he said.

    Oyebanjo challenged the students to do beyond seeking ready-made jobs after graduation and embrace entrepreneurship. He shared how he started producing drugs with them.

    Other lectures delivered at the event included “Hospital practice: teamwork, The future” by Dr Casmir Amadi; and “Community Pharmacy” by the Chief executive Officer of Dlightsom Mount pharmacy, George Okon,

    Okon advised those interested in going into drug production to first practice community pharmacy, which he described as the backbone of the pharmacy profession.  He said there is a lot to learn as a community pharmacist because of the multiple roles they play.

    “The backbone of the pharmacy profession is actually the community pharmacy: you are a pharmaceutical care provider, you are a counselor not just to the patient but to the other health care providers,” he said.

    Amadi said health professionals in the hospital must realise that they are working to achieve a common goal: the wellbeing of the patient.  He called for cooperation among the various professionals that work in the hospitals.

     

  • Registrar warns pharmacists against breaching ethics

    Registrar warns pharmacists against breaching ethics

    Pharmacists have been warned against breaking on the ethics of the profession. According to the Registrar, Pharmacists Council of Nigeria (PCN), Mr. Elijah Mohammed, any errant pharmacist would be punished.

    Such defaulting pharmacists will be made to face PCN’s disciplinary committee and sanctioned, if found guilty.

    Mohammed told rporters in Lagos: “The system is faced with moral and ethical crisis arising from decades of neglect, disobedience and passivity by many which have produced a culture ofpharmacy practice that lacks self-actualisation, control and the true commitment to the ethics of the profession. The system is bedeviled with landmark legislation and executive recklessness, a situation that has assumed illegality on demand and removed the essence of pharmacy practice from the public arena.”

    He likened the system to, “the Nollywood industry with all shades of actors acting various scripts to suit a hodgepodge of producers and directors alike. The pharmacy practice has long suffered from a generational gap with little genuine appreciation, understanding and co-operation between the older and younger generations of practitioners.”

    Mohammed said there was the need to bring together these generations to infuse them with common vision, a unified sense of purpose and recognition of their mutual independence. “These generations moving together towards a shared goal, can accomplish more than each of them could achieve separately. What it would take to lose everything was for one generation to fail in transferring its beliefs and principles to the next. The consequence of this was for the practice standing now at crossroads where it either turns back to the god of pharmacy, for redemption or face greater deterioration and ultimately self-extinction,” he stated.

    “We are going to move from transactional to transformational leadership structure in the system.  Transformation leadership, occurs when all concerned subscribe to the core values of integrity, honesty, dedication and transformation. Revolution rarely begins suddenly.  Instead, it grows over time as people become less satisfied with the conditions as they are.  One incidence will lead to another and tension mounts until finally catalytic event becomes the flash point that propels them into action”.

    He said: “These critical times call for radical response from people of conscience.  Traditional means, methods and modes of thoughts and actions, are insufficient to meet the needs of the present hour.  A more drastic approach, therefore, is required. In every generation, people of conscience usually come forth from within to bring about a change for good.  These people are men and women who are satisfied with nothing less than undivided devotion to the good of humanity, uncompromising obedience to the will of doing what is right and an unflinching engagement with a culture that is hostile to all things of good conscience”.

    The Registrar said there is a need for result-oriented regulation, monitoring and controlling activities for all aspect of pharmacy practice in Nigeria including the education and training of pharmacists and pharmacy-related personnel through the use of highly motivated officials, backed with adequate logistics and cutting-edge technology.

    ‘As a professional body’, he asked rhetorically, “must we wait for this to happen before we know that things must change for good?

    Mohammed lamented that, “The pharmacy profession and indeed the nation has watched,  mostly in silence, as the voice of reasoning and the laws of the practice have been progressively legislated out of the public arena just as the gladiators worship at the altar of greed, materialism and selfishness to perpetuate the malevolent deeds. My mission is a revolution devoid of violence and destruction but of love, professional sanctification and radical devotion to what is good that can bring the pharmacy community out of the woods. This is only achievable through a process of self and systemic transformation and actualisation.

    “The way forward, is for the system to create the opportunity for self-transformation through training and re-training, education and mass enlightenment campaign. That, is the only way to elicit the spirit of self-conviction and embedment of the mentality of ‘what must we do to be saved, the passion for and to do good for humanity which is the essence of the pharmacy practice’.

    Other ways, he said, will be to motivate the people to solve problems through collective responsibility and empowerment rather than reinforcing the over-lordship of the state on citizens. He said:”We should see ourselves as a bridge generation that builds on the past, lives in the present and plans for the future”.

    On his intention, Mohammed said: “I am here to rebuild the pharmacy practice, the civic office is too serious to be entrusted in the hands of charlatans, when serious people turned away from leadership roles, the field will be left to those who have nothing to offer than crass opportunism and damage to the people’s wellbeing. I call on all pharmacists to embrace the oath taken and abide by the ethics of the practice because there is no room for compromise again, under the new administration.”

    The Chairman; Bruno Nwakwo, said all fields of pharmaceutical practice will be visited and regulated, “we are in the business of healing through medicines. So let all pharmacists, especially in the clinical and community practices, cross check prescription brought to them by patients, so that wrong prescriptions can be tracked and patients saved.”

  • Pharmacists petition Jonathan over forex policy

    Drug prices may soar by at least 50 per cent in the first quarter of next year no thanks to tariff re-adjustments by some agencies.

    Pharmaceutical Society of Nigeria (PSN) President Olumide Akintayo, who broke the news, spoke of inconsistencies in the application of the Retail Dutch Auction System (RDAS) by banks.

    In a letter to President Goodluck Jonathan, Akintayo warned the Federal Government to ensure proper application of RDAS.

    He said financial institutions argued that medicines, medical devices and machinery brought in for use in the factory are part of finished goods.

    This, he said, has negative implication as it excludes pharmaceutical companies and operatives from accessing foreign exchange (forex) from  RDAS.

    Akintayo said: “While the Nigerian pharmaceutical industry, which provides essential services, recognises the Federal Government’s economic intents regarding this new directive, we are also of the view that our government is cognisant of the need for special dispensation and industry engagement in such a critical policy proposal to ensure stakeholders’ involvement and effective actualisation that does not compromise citizens’ wellbeing. The banks are discretional in what are finished goods or not.”

    Some, he said classified pharmaceutical bottles as finished goods because in their reckoning the form is not changed in their manufacturing process.

    The PSN chief said: “To banks, anything you are not changing its nature to use is assumed to be a finished good.”

    He urged Mr President to intervene as CBN’s position on the issue would jeopardise people’s  health, adding: “It will only cause avoidable skyrocketing cost of medicines and other medical equipment if finished pharmaceuticals and the components of their production are not waived on this exclusion list immediately.

    “It is a statement of fact that pharmaceutical raw materials, packaging materials and even finished drugs are essential specialised commodities, which logically makes the Pharmaceutical industry as sensitive and a priority area. Access to affordable same medicine must be an item of utmost concern only at the level of security of the nation.”

  • Pharmacists cautioned on PPP

    The Pharmaceutical Society of Nigeria (PSN) has condemned some hospitals which have reduced pharmacy to a purely commercial venture of buying and selling, under the public-private partnership (PPP) in some  governments facilities.

    Its president, Olumide Akintayo, said there were patients who visit public hospitals because they believe their drugs would be genuines given the fake drug syndrome ravaging the health sector.

    “But it has come to the notice of the society that some public-private partnership (PPP) in some of the health facilities are buying and selling drugs with absolutely no standards.”

    He said: “Some of the federal health institutions which experimented with privatisation in pharmacy facilities are still in a huge mess, even after such contracts have been terminated, because the profiteers, who utilised the goodwill of the institutions to source drugs from the pharmaceutical industry, simply sold the drugs and pocketed the accruing revenue.

    “Many of the pharmaceutical companies refuse to do business with public health facilities up till now with serious consequences for consumers of health in such institutions.

    “That is why the PSN continues to caution on the consequences of diverting a guaranteed public sector market in pharmacy facilities to private profiteers. Some of the fundamental fall-outs that will always suffice remains who takes responsibility when anything goes wrong with respect to drugs dispensed in such facilities concessioned to profiteers. The profiteer or the government,” he asked.

    It is on record that Lagos State government that blazed the trail has been able to adapt its privitisation model of drugs dispensing under the PPP to the PPP guidelines prescribed by the PCN.

    Akintayo said: “This is why PSN continues to caution on the consequences of diverting a guaranteed public sector market in pharmacy facilities to private profiteers. We at the PSN believe very much in the spirits of a private sector driven economy and logically support the concept of legitimate models of a PPP. Pharmacy practice is a regulated one with a myriad of regulatory agencies having substantial latitudes of influence. These agencies include PCN, NAFDAC, NDLEA, Federal and State taskforce as well as other regulatory agencies of government. “

    Akintayo who spoke at activities announcing the society’s 87th annual national conference, with the theme: ‘Transforming pharmacy practice for better outcomes’, to be held at Akwa Ibom, in the first week of next month, said: “PSN therefore is making a clarion call on pharmacists, pharmaceutical companies and stakeholders to familiarises themselves with the tenets of the PPP guidelines of the Pharmacists Council of Nigeria (PCN) before entering into contracts with public pharmacy practise facilities, to reduce  the obnoxious practice of buying and selling of drugs with no standards in the guise of a PPP.”

  • Pharmacists urge action against quacks, fake drugs

    Pharmacists urge action against quacks, fake drugs

    The ‘Pharmacy Week’ organised by the Pharmaceutical Society of Nigeria (PSN), Rivers State branch ended its Pharmacy week with a call to place the issue of pharmaceutical care of Nigerians in the front burner of national policy in order for patients to get the best.

    The programme which has as its theme“Better Health Care Outcome through Pharmaceutical Care” gave pharmacists and other health workers the opportunity to know how to achieve better health outcomes.

    The weeklong event started with a thanksgiving service at St. Paul African Church, Port Harcourt. There was also a walk against Ebola from Rumuokuta to Ada-George, during which hand sanitisers were freely distributed to people.

    The pharmacists also visited Aboloma axis of Port Harcourt to give free drugs to the residence after screening them for HIV/AIDS, diabetes, high blood pressure and other ailments.

    At the opening ceremony, which took place at Hotel Presidential, the chairman of the occasion, His Royal Majesty, King Alfred Diette Spiff, the former governor of old Rivers State, thanked the society for its contribution to humanity and urged them to continue to play an important role in the administration and development of the health sector.

    The chairman of Rivers chapter of PSN, Chukunda Godson, said the greatest challenge confronting genuine pharmacy practice is the menace of quack pharmacists. He said the organisation cannot fight the issue of quacks alone but pharmacists have to be particularly knowledgeable enough to be able to identify and isolate nonprofessionals in their midst.

    “These people are agent of destruction, they are evil and they want to take over the society that is the more reason why everybody must be involve in the fight against quacks.

    “The major stakeholder in the health sector, pharmacists in community practice, hospitals, academia, industry, administration and other areas of the Nigerian economy, are continuously involved in the delivery of quality service in line with the ethics of the profession.

    “Our professional and social responsibilities remain sacrosanct in the numerous activities we engage in including safe drug use campaigns, education and enlightenment programmes on the prevention and management of diseases (HIV/AIDS and Ebola inclusive) and free health outreach missions to rural communities.

    While commending Governor Rotimi Amaechi for donating a bus to PSN, a gesture, which, he said, ameliorated their transport challenges, he noted the state remains the only state in the federation whose task force on fake and counterfeit products and illegal premises still operated with hired buses, adding: “This situation does not speak well for us. Our people are at risk of these fake and counterfeit products if the task force is not sufficiently mobilised for effectiveness and efficiency.”

    He also highlighted the hindrances preventing the organisation from reaching out to more communities during Pharmacy Week, saying: “The human and material demands of these programmes are usually enormous. The major constraints in our desire to reach out to more communities and towns in the state have been finance and logistics.”

     

  • Kano destroys N4b fake drugs

    The Kano State Task Force on Illicit Drugs has destroyed counterfeit drugs worth N4 billion, the Commissioner for Commerce, Industries and Mines Farouk Umar Jubrin said yesterday.

    He said in the last two weeks, the task force mopped up illicit drugs worth over N300 million, adding that in the last three years of Governor Rab’iu Kwankwaso’s administration, fake drugs reduced drastically.

    Speaking at the Sixth Annual Symposium and Business Summit organised by  the National Association of Industrial Pharmacists, the commissioner said: “Since we came to power in 2011 till date, we have destroyed fake drugs worth over N4 billion. Kano is the hub of the drug trade, while the Southwest and Southeast are the hub of drug manufacturing. Most of these drugs find their way into Kano illegally and the Kwankwaso administration has declared war on fake drugs.”

    Senior Special Assistant to the Governor on Pharmaceutical Affairs Ali Adamu said: “We have shut down the notorious drug market at the Abubakar Rimi Market. We are aware they still exist and operate in small fragments. We will not relax until we eliminate the menace.”

    State Chairman of the National Association of Industrial Pharmacists Bala Maikudi said: “A situation where over 90 per cent of the drugs we consume are imported is unfortunate. We take billions of naira to other countries, creating employment and growing their economies, while ours remains in a shambles.

    “This unfortunate scenario explains why the fight against fake and substandard products (drugs) remains unabated, in spite of numerous regulatory agencies and millions of naira spent on it. All these are by-products of not setting our priorities right and by extension not believing in what we can do as a nation.”

  • Pharmacists vow to drag C/River govt to court over concession of public hospitals

    Pharmacists vow to drag C/River govt to court over concession of public hospitals

    THE Pharmaceutical Society of Nigeria (PSN) in Cross River State has threatened to drag the state government to court over the concession of public hospitals in the state.

    The government had last week signed a Memorandum of Understanding with four concessionaires for the management of three general hospitals and the provision and management of outdoor signage services.

    The health facilities involved were the General Hospital, Bekwarra, which is to be run by Bakor Hospital Limited; General Hospital, Obudu, taken over by Saint Luke Hospital Consortium; while Meditron-Loba Healthcare Ltd takes over the pharmacies and clinical diagnostic centres at the General Hospitals in Igoli, Yahe, Okpoma and Sankwala.

    A statement made available to reporters by the chairman of the state chapter of PSN, Mr. Paul Agbulu, said the concession of public hospital pharmacies was unethical, illegal and a denial of the people to get quality pharmaceutical services. While noting that PSN is not against public-privatepartnership, they viewed the concession of government hospital pharmacies as a step in the wrong direction. He said:

    “The laws establishing government hospital pharmacies are quite different community pharmacies, private hospitals and marketing companies. It is also illegal for any of the licenses of these companies to be super imposed on the other. “The bedrock of setting up government hospital is to render healthcare services, train hospital staff and provide medicare to all, especially the downtrodden.

     “The following questions posits: Who takes responsibility when fake and counterfeit drugs get into the system? What is the legal framework within the pharmacy and drug laws of the federation these concessionaires hope to operate? What ethical pharmaceutical platform will these companies operate?

  • Identify opportunities, pharmacists urged

    Pharmacists have been urged to identify business potential in the sub-sector.The call was made at a preconference briefing of the Association of  Industral Pharmacists of Nigeria (NAIP) in Lagos

    According to the association, the sector contributes a paltry 0.5 per cent to the country’s gross domestic product (GDP).

    At a pre-conference briefing, the association said pharmacists need to show interest in business aspect of their profession.

    Its Conference Planning Committee Chairman, Mr John Adekoje, said many issues, such as the chaotic drug distribution and regulations, would be discussed.

    Adekoje said the 17th conference has the theme: Tapping the opportunities in the pharmaceutical industry for wealth creation.

    He said about 80 per cent of drugs are being imported, adding that investors can pull resources together to boost local drug manufacturing.

    Adekoje said more pharmaceutical companies should get the World Health Organisation’s (WHO’s) pre-qualifications to make them sell drugs internationally.

    Executive Secretary, NAIP, Mr Adebayo Temenu, said there was no enough production capacity.

    He said Nigeria needs to improve its drugs production to the level of countries, such as United States, India and Germany, for it to be able to satisfy local consumption and export medicines.

    Temenu said the Federal Government can initiate research grant for the development of mega companies for new products. “It is not proper for retailers to buy drugs from manufacturers directly rather from wholesalers who go through the distribution chain,” he said.

    Temenu said some of the problems of the sector would be addressed at 17th National Conference of NAIP in Lagos on today and tomorrow.

  • Identify opportunities, pharmacists urged

    Pharmacists have been urged to identify business potential in the sub-sector.The call was made at a preconference briefing of the Association of  Industral Pharmacists of Nigeria (NAIP) in Lagos

    According to the association, the sector contributes a paltry 0.5 per cent to the country’s gross domestic product (GDP).

    At a pre-conference briefing, the association said pharmacists need to show interest in business aspect of their profession.

    Its Conference Planning Committee Chairman, Mr John Adekoje, said many issues, such as the chaotic drug distribution and regulations, would be discussed.

    Adekoje said the 17th conference has the theme: Tapping the opportunities in the pharmaceutical industry for wealth creation.

    He said about 80 per cent of drugs are being imported, adding that investors can pull resources together to boost local drug manufacturing.

    Adekoje said more pharmaceutical companies should get the World Health Organisation’s (WHO’s) pre-qualifications to make them sell drugs internationally.

    Executive Secretary, NAIP, Mr Adebayo Temenu, said there was no enough production capacity.

    He said Nigeria needs to improve its drugs production to the level of countries, such as United States, India and Germany, for it to be able to satisfy local consumption and export medicines.

    Temenu said the Federal Government can initiate research grant for the development of mega companies for new products. “It is not proper for retailers to buy drugs from manufacturers directly rather from wholesalers who go through the distribution chain,” he said.

    Temenu said some of the problems of the sector would be addressed at 17th National Conference of NAIP in Lagos on today and tomorrow.