Low conviction rate of cases related to fake drugs a concern
Synopsis
The parliamentary standing committee on chemicals and fertilisers has highlighted a concerning 5.9% conviction rate for spurious or adulterated drug cases in India. From 2015-19, 593 drug samples were spurious, and 9,266 were substandard, yet only 35 convictions were made. The committee recommended stringent, time-bound punishments for such offences.
The committee also expressed concern that the conviction rate data is not maintained centrally for penal action for spurious and adulterated drugs. It, therefore, recommended stringent action to be taken in a time-bound manner for exemplary punishments for spurious/adulterated drugs.
The panel also expressed concern that the National Survey of Drugs (2014-16) revealed that 10% of samples from government sources were found to be substandard compared with 3% from private sources, indicating 3.17 times more prevalence of substandard drugs in government channels than in the retail market, which could indicate loopholes in the procurement processes.
The committee found that the department's reply on the higher prevalence of 'not of standard quality' (NSQ) drugs from government sources "did not address" the core reasons regarding the issue. The panel has, therefore, demanded a detailed explanation on the challenges, flaws and enabling factors contributing to the higher prevalence of NSQ drugs from government sources.
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