WHPA_Joint_Statement_on_Counterfeiting
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WHPAjointstatementoncounterfeitingofmedicalproducts
Background
All health care professionals have a common goal to protect the well-being of patients in
all parts of the world from poor quality, substandard and counterfeit medical products.
Pro-active steps must be taken in collaboration with Governments and other key
stakeholders of the legitimate supply chain such as the pharmaceutical manufacturers
and distributors to ensure the quality, safety and efficacy of all medical products
available in countries, in accordance with recognised international standards. This
form of quality assurance applies to both branded and generic products, to both the
private and public sectors, and to both imported and locally manufactured products.
The World Health Professions Alliance WHPA represents more than 26 million health care professionals in
more than 130 countries and is an alliance of the International Council of Nurses (ICN), the International
Pharmaceutical Federation (FIP), the World Confederation for Physical Therapy (WCPT), the World Dental
Federation (FDI) and the World Medical Association (WMA). WHPA is extremely concerned about
the infiltration and sale of counterfeit medical products of the legitimate supply chain in causing life
threatening adverse effects in patients.
Counterfeit medical products must be considered to be unsafe and ineffective. They result in wasted
resources spent on purchasing, inventory, transport and dispensing with little or no effect or even cause
harm to the patient. Counterfeit medicinal products threaten patient safety by, at best, causing no
improvement or, worse, causing added burden of disease and even death; endanger public health
by increasing the risk of antimicrobial resistance; and patients’ trust in health professionals and health
systems, who are seen not to be able to provide an adequate treatment. Public health and patient safety
are being put at risk and now is the time to act.
Health professions are crucial to combating counterfeit medical products. By visual inspections, nurses,
pharmacists, physicians, dentists and physical therapists who are constantly in contact with medicines and
medical devices may be able to detect anomalies in the physical appearances of medical products and
trigger investigation. Health professionals need to increasingly consider counterfeit medicines as a reason
for non-response or unexpected response in pharmacotherapy in the patients they care for. Yet, for health
professionals to be able to effectively play their role, it is necessary that national authorities set up effective
systems for the collection of information indicating possible counterfeits signal, verify and investigate this
information and feed back the results to those who have provided the information.
This global and deadly phenomenon of counterfeit medical products will only be eradicated through
an agreed framework of effective coordination, cooperation and action at the global level. The WHPA
agrees to step up its commitment and promote the awareness of the dangers posed by counterfeit medical
products among health professionals, consumers and patients and their national governments.
Design:–Print:
www.whpa.org/counterfeit_campaign.htm
BEAWARE
Counterfeit Medecine
Counterfeit Medecine
Counterfeit
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Counterfeit Medecine
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M e d e c i n e
C oC o u n t e r f e i t M e d e c i n e
BEAWARE
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The Seven key principles
Against this background, the WHPA identifies the following 7 key principles for
enabling international cooperation and exchange of information among relevant
stakeholders involved in detecting and combating counterfeit medical products:
1. The primary focus of combating counterfeit medical products is the protection of public health and
recognition that the main victims of counterfeiting are patients.
2. Counterfeiting of medical products, including the entire range of activities from manufacturing to
knowingly providing them to patients, is a vile and serious criminal offense that puts human lives at risk
and undermines the credibility of health systems.
3. A comprehensive strategy to combat counterfeiting of medical products require an active participation
that involves all stakeholders of the public sector and the civil society through organizations representing
health professionals, patients, manufacturers, distributors, and as well as the media and governments.
4. Education of health professionals is crucial for detection and prevention of counterfeit medical products
and is required in order for them to educate patients and populations about the risks of buying
counterfeit medical products from unknown and unreliable sources.
5. Increased vigilance by health care professionals and patients can help make public and individual
health safer. When prescribing, dispensing or administering medicines, health professionals need to
consider and report counterfeit medicines as a reason for non-response or unexpected response in
pharmacotherapy in the patients they care for.
6. International specialised agencies responsible for procuring and distributing medical products should
identify substandard and counterfeit medical products and publish a list of these products, so that steps
can be taken to remove these medical products from the market when discovered.
7. National governments are positioned to play a key role in eliminating counterfeit medical products
by the enforcement of pharmaceutical and penal legislation through efficient prosecution, by ensuring
adherence to Good Manufacturing Practices (GMP), Good Distribution Practices (GDP) and Good
Pharmacy Practices (GPP) and by increasing national drug regulatory capacity and performance.
A.J.M. Hoek
General Secretary & CEO, International Pharmaceutical Federation (FIP)
Otmar Kloiber
Secretary General, World Medical Association
David Benton
Chief Executive Officer, International Council of Nurses
David C. Alexander
Executive Director, FDI World Dental Federation
Brenda J. Myers
Secretary General,World Confederation for Physical Therapy (WCPT)
March 2010