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Nigerian startups help fight scourge of fake medicines

Mark White by Mark White
January 14, 2022
in Supply Chain
0


LAGOS, Jan 13 (Reuters) – Startups in Nigeria are helping fight counterfeit pharmaceutical drugs in Africa’s most populous nation, where the prevalence rate of fake drugs is higher than the global average 10% and contributes to several deaths annually.

The most counterfeited are drugs for anti-malaria, pain and antibiotics, according to the National Agency for Food and Drug Administration and Control (NAFDAC).

To fight the flood of fake pills, the agency, in partnership with the startups has created stickers with unique codes that manufacturers and distributors can attach to boxes and sachets of pills. Consumers can then use apps on their phones to scan the code and confirm their authenticity.

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Lagos-based Chekkit Technologies’ mobile app allows patients to check authenticity and enables manufacturers to see the number of new customers using their products.

“They’ve (manufacturers) also been able to discover things like side effects, potential side effects their product could have on consumers based on what people say about their product,” the company’s founder Dare Odumade told Reuters.

A worker at Biofem Industries processing facility sticks authentication labels on drugs, in Lagos, Nigeria December 14, 2021. REUTERS/Nneka Chile

NAFDAC’s director of investigation and enforcement directorate Kingsley Ejiofor said the agency had in the past three years seized 2 trillion naira ($4.8 billion) worth of counterfeit drugs.

He said tracking apps were boosting the confidence of consumers.

“We currently have about 200 containers of counterfeit medicine at the ports scheduled for destruction. Just imagine the people that could have died as a result of use of such products,” Ejiofor said, adding that China and India were the major sources of the fake medicines.

At Sproxil Africa, a mobile authentication firm, Managing Director Chinedum Chijioke said the company’s app empowered users to validate the authenticity of products they were purchasing.

Biofem Industries imports pharmaceutical products and uses Sproxil technology, which has helped create more visible supply chain for its drugs and other fast-moving consumer goods, said Chief Executive Officer Femi Soremekun.

($1 = 413.4400 naira)

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Additional reporting by Fikayo Owoeye; Writing by MacDonald Dzirutwe; Editing by Lisa Shumaker

Our Standards: The Thomson Reuters Trust Principles.



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Mark White

Mark White

Mark White is the editor of the ProcurementNation, a Media Outlet covering supply chain and logistics issues. He joined The New York Times in 2007 as an commodities reporter, and most recently served as foreign-exchange editor in New York.

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