China launched a campaign on
Thursday, to promote the use of technology to guarantee the safety
of pharmaceuticals and patients.
"The number of drug-related accidents has risen in
recent years and the cases involving the Qiqihar No. 2
Pharmaceutical and the Xinfu drugs has attracted the attention and
concern of the central government," said Shao Mingli, head of the
State Food and Drug Administration (SFDA).
"It's time for us to take action to prevent such
accidents," Shao said.
The campaign, launched by the Ministry of Science and
Technology (MOST), the State Administration of Traditional Chinese
Medicine (SATCM) and the SFDA, will provide full technological
support for every step of a drug's journey from laboratory to
patient.
"We will solve up to ten major technological problems
concerning drug safety over the next five to ten years and set up
three to five authorized and standard drug safety research and
review centers," said Wang Hongguang, director of the China Biotech
Development Center.
Through the campaign, we also hope to improve
innovation in drugs manufacturing and raise the competitiveness of
Chinese medicine in the mainstream international market, Wang
added.
SFDA, China's national drug regulator, has revoked the
license of the maker of the Xinfu drug, an antibiotic blamed for at
least six deaths and dozens of illnesses.
Patients who took the antibiotic developed severe
adverse reactions, such as chest, kidney or stomach pains, vomiting
and anaphylactic shock.
Earlier this year, 11 people were killed after
injecting a drug made by the Qiqihar No. 2 Pharmaceutical Co. Ltd.
in the northeastern province of Heilongjiang.
(Xinhua News Agency October 20, 2006)
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