ACCRA MEDICINE PEDDLERS NOW SELL PRESCRITION-ONLY MEDICINES
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A medicine peddler plying his trade along the Accra rail way lines |
PEDDLERS of medicine are doing brisk
business in some markets and lorry parks in Accra, selling medicines that even
chemical sellers by law are not permitted to dispense.
Eddies Dailies has observed that the
activity is prevalent in the Kaneshie, Agbobloshie, Makola, Kantamanto and
Okaishie markets and some lorry parks and streets in the capital, including the
Kwame Nkrumah Interchange area and the Tema Station.
The peddlers sell medicines such as
Tramadol, Cytotec, Dexacorten, painkillers, steroids, multivitamins,
aphrodisiacs, butt enlargement pills, among others, that are packaged in
transparent plastic bags and carried around in baskets.
Some of the drugs, such as Tramadol,
Dexacorten and Cytotec, fall under the Food and Drugs Authority’s (FDA’s)
category of medicines that are to be sold on prescription.
Aside from that, the peddling of medicine
contravenes Section 110 of the Health Professions Regulatory Bodies Act, 2013
(Act 857).
Preference
While accurate statistics could not be
easily obtained on the number of persons who engaged in the practice, in
putting together this report, about 50 of them were spotted within the
Kantamanto, Kaneshie and the Makola markets in a day.
While some peddlers hawked the drugs in the
market, others were stationed at vantage points where their patrons visited and
sometimes consulted them.
Some traders, mostly market women, were
seen buying medicines from them. In some instances, the peddlers dispensed
drugs to their customers after the buyers had told them their conditions.
The situation was less pervasive in the
Kwame Nkrumah Interchange area, Tema Station and the 37 Hospital pedestrian
lanes, compared to the numbers spotted in the markets.
In a chat with one of the peddlers, who
gave his name only as Opoku, he said due to the periodic swoops carried out by
the police, many of his colleagues preferred to sell in the markets to secure
themselves against arrest.
Cheaper drugs
In a random interview with some traders at
the Kaneshie Market who said they regularly patronised the services of the
peddlers, they indicated that the medicines dispensed by the peddlers were
cheaper, compared to what was sold in the licensed medical shops.
“I normally buy from them because their
drugs are cheaper. The same drug could cost you twice the amount at a drug
store,” Agnes Abban, a petty trader, claimed.
While interacting with Bismark Cudjoe, one
of the peddlers stationed at the Kantamanto Market, he dispensed an
anti-malaria drug, Malabase, to a woman who complained of headache, feverishness
and cold.
When the medicine was later mentioned to
the Deputy Registrar in charge of Professional Development at the Pharmacy
Council, Mr Albert Wiredu Arkoh, he said Malabase was to be taken by pregnant
women to protect them against malaria.
He expressed shock that the medicine, which
he said was to be sold “strictly” on prescription, had found its way onto the
open market.
Challenge
While admitting that the activities of drug
peddlers constituted a public health danger, Mr Arkoh said the council did not
have adequate personnel to tackle the problem.
He said the problem had escalated in recent
times due to the council’s inability to broaden supervision in the
pharmaceutical industry.
“In the whole of the Greater Accra Region
we have only two officers in charge of enforcement. Meanwhile, about 60 per
cent of all pharmaceutical facilities in the country are located in Accra. We
are doing our best to clean the system, but we are highly incapacitated,” Mr
Arkoh complained.
FDA
When contacted, the Head of Public Affairs
at the FDA, Mr James Lartey, expressed the authority’s readiness to collaborate
with the Pharmacy Council to clamp down on the activities of drug peddlers.
He was, however, quick to add that the
sensitisation of the public against the purchase of drugs from unapproved
persons was essential to fighting the menace.
“We should concentrate more on public
education because when there is no demand for the products by the public, there
will not be any supply,” he said.
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