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(From
Georgia to Laguna, there were trenchant reactions to this
column on what expiry dates on medicine bottles or packets
mean? From Maryland, a US Food and Drug Administration staff
member asked for a copy of: "To Junk Or Not To Junk"
(That column reported that Harvard University's School of
Medicine, Brigham Young University Hospital, among others,
reveal that studies of US Armed Forces $1-billion medicine
stockpiles concluded: most medicines remain effective even
15 years beyond expiration dates. Extending shelf-life of
medicine prevented the US military from trashing useful medicine
at substantial savings - JLM).
From
Emory University Hospital pharmacy, in Atlanta Georgia, Patrick
H. O'Brien emailed:" (I'm) a US pharmacist who worked
with eight medical / surgical missions to the Philippines.
Two were to Tagbilaran City in 1992 and 1994. And I applaud
the common sense and non-political approach to the issue of
expiration dating on medications in this un-biased column.
"As
with most things, expiration dates are simply guidelines to
be used. Medications are more affected by storage conditions
than by a simple date. How many of us have gotten relief from
a headache from a Tylenol that passed its expiration date?
How many of us actually look?
"The
well intentioned Bureau of Food and Drugs (BFAD) advises that
medicines, imported by foreign medical missions, must have
at least a one year expiration date.
That
requirement may be appropriate for international pharmaceutical
companies' imports. But it puts an enormous burden on medical
mission donations. They receive most of their donated drugs
with a short expiration date of two to six months. How can
I request donations, then demand a one year expiration date?
'Our
mission group will leave for a surgical mission to Roxas City.
We accumulated medicines that are not expired but lack BFAD's
one year required dating. Worse, efforts to contact the BFAD
to arrange an inspection, by e-mail, regular mail and phone,
all went unanswered. Maybe they're busy dreaming up other
rules?
Retired
University of the Philippines professor Dr. Flor Lacanilao
wrote: "Your column is relevant because many of our people
are poor. And misinformation, about expiry dates, deny them
perfectly good medicine.
"Studies
reveal that most medicines remain effective beyond expiry
dates which are merely indicative. If they are stored carefully,
most medicines remain effective. . In tropical countries,
like the Philippines, shelf life may be shorter if the packaging
is opened.
"There
are many reasons why BFAD is ineffective. But the major flaw
stems from the fact that this agency has very few scientists."
Cebu
business executive Josephine Aboitiz Booth emailed: "
I've just read your article on expired medicines. And I do
recall when the news report first came out after the US military
received the study (on their medical stockpiles) after spending
$4 million. The conclusion was that many medicines are still
good way past their expiry date.
"Here
we are, with so many sick poor, without access to medicines.
I think it is worth the 'gamble' to give them so-called 'expired'
medicines with a 70 to 90 percent chance rather than nothing!
Every operation is a gamble. And yet we have to have them.
"Some
people act as just holier than thou but offer no other option.
I now take expired medicines myself that have been sitting
in my medicine cabinet."
Dr.
Napoleon Vergara served with the United Nations at the Food
and Agriculture Organization, in Rome and various countries.
Previously, he taught at UP Los Banos. He writes: "I've
read your report on expiry dates on medicines --- and was
reminded how expiry dates on many other products should not
be taken literally.
"Take
one item: photographic film. My thesis required extensive
use of photographs.
And
I was short of film. What I had was so called "expired"
film. Photographers advised me that if carefully stored and
packed, film would be good long after expiry dates. And they
proved right.
"What
is tragic is so many people are needlessly denied perfectly
good medicine. Our officials and agencies simply are so outdated
and so inept."
Jove
Trinidad emailed but didn't give his background, address,
etc. Editors promptly wastebasket such letters since they
lack candor and dodge accountability. We make an exception
because some question - assertions, really --. show the confusion.
Trinidad
writes: Did your research.look if into the question if there
has been a study of specific drugs expiry dates?" (The
US Food and Drug Administration did the research.
Not
me. Allow me to decline the honor. And, yes FDA studied 100
specific drugs in the
military stockpile.. In fact, the column reported several
examples. )
"Are
'expired medicines' sold to Filipino resellers by foreign
drug suppliers? Do the latter, knowing fully well that they
are "expired drugs" but are acquiring them (sic)
because they are being sold to them as "discounted items?
Are boticas selling "expired drugs" to the public?
More likely, than not I bet."
(Questions
or accusations? Since the writer is willing to bet, he should
share his "research." The poor will know why they
lack medicine.)
(E-mail: juan_mercado@boholchronicle.com) |