The Drug Swindlers
- 1 October 1990
- journal article
- Published by SAGE Publications in International Journal of Health Services
- Vol. 20 (4) , 561-572
- https://doi.org/10.2190/p32d-0141-m86b-f7at
Abstract
In a number of important developing nations—among them Indonesia, India, and Brazil—clinical pharmacologists and other drug experts are revealing mounting concern over the marketing of fraudulent drug products. These are shaped, colored, flavored, marked, and packaged to mimic the real product They may contain the actual antibiotic or other drug indicated on the label, but so “cut” that the product provides only a small fraction of the labeled amount, or they may contain only useless flour or starch. At best, they are worthless. At the worst, they can kill. In most instances, it is believed that these “drugs” are produced and marketed by local or domestic fly-by-night groups and not by multinational pharmaceutical firms. Blame for these practices is placed on inadequate or unenforced laws, only trivial punishments, bribery and corruption, and the fact that generally “nobody inspects the inspectors.”Keywords
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