Congress hasn't learned its lesson from China's tainted toothpaste

Congress hasn't learned its lesson from China's tainted toothpaste
Seattle Post-Intelligencer

Counterfeit Colgate toothpaste containing diethylene glycol, a poisonous chemical used in antifreeze, recently turned up in discount grocery stores all over the East Coast.

This dangerous chemical has long been used by chemical companies in China as a substitute for more expensive glycerin, an ingredient necessary for toothpaste, soap and other cosmetics and drugs. In 1997, for example, fever syrup laced with diethylene glycol traced to China killed dozens of Haitian children. After many assurances that the Chinese government had cracked down on the practice, the same fate later befell 100 young Panamanians. Mass poisonings from diethlyene glycol have also been reported in Bangladesh, Argentina, Nigeria and India.

Previously only a problem in the developing world, the toxin now threatens U.S. consumers. If even toothpaste is susceptible to contamination by unregulated foreign companies, imagine the potential for disaster in something as lucrative as fake drugs.

Several members of Congress have introduced legislation to allow the importation of pharmaceuticals from abroad, promising that imports will be closely scrutinized and only permitted from certain countries.

But the reality is not so simple.

First, obtaining drugs from nations like Britain and France offers little protection, because chemicals, pharmaceuticals and other consumer goods move freely among the 27 European Union member states through a system of "parallel trade." And because the E.U. does not require drug importers to record product information like batch numbers, it's quite common for goods to travel outside official distribution channels. Therefore, drugs purchased from "safe" countries may well have originated in Latvia, Cyprus or elsewhere in the E.U., where there are ample opportunities for counterfeits to enter the legitimate supply chain.

Canada is no safer. Most large Canadian Internet pharmacies admit to purchasing many of their drugs from the European Union. So even Canadian drugs are exposed to the risks of European parallel trade.

Indeed, the World Health Organization estimates that up to 10 percent of globally traded drugs are counterfeit. Most originate in Asia and Latin America, where technology is making production cheaper and safety regulations are poorly enforced -- perfect conditions for manufacturing and distributing fake drugs.

Case in point: drugs for treating malaria. The Journal of Tropical Medicine a and International Health found more than half the anti-malarial medication bought in Southeast Asia in 2003 to be counterfeit.

Making matters even more worrisome, penalties for counterfeiters are relatively slight. In South America, selling cocaine will land a person in jail for 15 years, but making and selling fake medicine gets the perpetrator only six months. These small risks -- especially when combined with the potential financial rewards -- have contributed to the rapid growth of counterfeiting.

By 2010, it's estimated global counterfeit drug sales will total $75 billion.

According to the Joint Terrorism Task Force, terrorists have also proven adept at exploiting weakened chains of pharmaceutical custody in North America. In a recent report, the task force revealed that a global terrorist ring with ties to Hezbollah has been importing counterfeit drugs into the U.S. through Canada.

Contrary to what advocates of importation declare, simply mandating safety by legislative fiat will not make imported drugs safer.

Allowing the importation of prescription drugs with the ostensible purpose of saving consumers a few bucks is a dangerous response to high drug prices. Congress has a responsibility to protect Americans from overseas threats, not expose them to those hazards.

Unfortunately, Congress seems not to have learned from America's recent ordeal with tainted toothpaste.

Peter J. Pitts is president of the Center for Medicine in the Public Interest and a former associate commissioner of the FDA.

Featured

Drug Supplies and Economics 101
February 3, 2012  
Cutting Healthcare Spending with Occam's Razor
January 13, 2012  
Plan B Science or Pure Politics
January 1, 2012  

Social Networks

Receive latest news & event updates
Provide email below:

Like CMPI on Facebook
Follow CMPI on Twitter
Connect with CMPI on LinkedIn
Watch our Videos on CMPI YouTube Channel
Subscribe to Receive CMPI RSS Feeds