African Startup Using Phones to Spot Counterfeit Drugs
Drug Lane runs through a market in the heart of Accra, Ghana. It’s past the office towers going up to the east of the central business district, past the pushy vendors with fake Louis Vuitton luggage, and past the women selling trays of raw beef under the midday sun. The alley bristles with signboards for pills, powders, and other substances. One store is packed to the rafters with boxes of painkillers and antibiotics. On the wall are two posters: One is for Coartem, a malaria treatment made by the Swiss drug company Novartis, and the other advertises something called Recharger, supposedly made from the male silkworm moth. The notice is vague about specific uses, but it does advise using condoms.The man behind the counter, Yaw Frempong, can’t recommend either drug—at least not formally. Like 85 percent of the people selling medicine in Ghana, he isn’t a pharmacist. Most of his stock comes from China, India, and Malaysia, imported by Ghanaian distributors who supply everyone from “licensed chemical sellers” like him to actual pharmacies and hospitals.
Related Posts
Securing Our Future: On the Anti-Counterfeit Fight Back with Avolites
In Park Royal, West London, a digital fight back is brewing. Innovation is being...
Man,37, arrested for selling fake insecticides
A 37-year-old man is in the grips of the Police in the Eastern region for selling...
Global crackdown seizes fake drugs worth $41 million
A worldwide police crackdown has seized a record $41-million haul of illegal...
BSF seizes 10 gold biscuits from Indian woman’s footwear
he Border Security Force (BSF) seized ten gold biscuits worth over Rs 80 lakh...