omniture

WHO To Unveil Global Anti-Counterfeiting Plan

World Health Organization
2006-11-03 12:03 4479


GENEVA, Nov. 3 /Xinhua-PRNewswire/ -- On 15 November, the World Health

Organization (WHO) and its partners will officially launch the first ever

International Medical Products Anti-counterfeiting Taskforce (IMPACT) and

unveil the global plan to combat counterfeit medical products.

(Logo: http://www.prnasia.com/sa/20061102095006-51.jpg )

At its first official meeting in Bonn, Germany, IMPACT will release the

most recent estimates of the number of counterfeit products currently

circulating on the world’s markets, launch pilot programmes in three

countries, and present a tool to strengthen countries’ legislative capacity

to deal with medical counterfeiting.

IMPACT is focused on five action areas embracing the different national

and international sectors related to counterfeiting. These are: legislative

and regulatory infrastructure; regulatory implementation; enforcement;

technology; and risk communication.

"Without changes and improvements in those key areas, we will not succeed

in the fight against counterfeits," said Dr Howard Zucker, WHO Assistant

Director-General for Health Technology and Pharmaceuticals. "Counterfeit

medicines must be tackled not only through global efforts but also by a truly

collaborative, cross-cutting approach involving medicine regulatory

authorities, health professionals, enforcement officials, law-makers and

industry."

Counterfeit medicines are dangerous products. They promote drug resistant

strains of disease and can worsen medical conditions or cause death. They

are present on all markets and are increasing as counterfeiters’ methods

become more sophisticated, infiltrating official channels of distribution as

well as using illegal web sites to sell their wares.

Counterfeits are of greater concern in countries with weak regulatory

control mechanisms. These are often the countries with the highest burden of

disease, the poorest populations and the greatest need for reliable

medicines.

The IMPACT initiative was first proposed by WHO at a meeting in Rome in

February this year. WHO Member States and all major stakeholders in the

global community welcomed the plan to tackle the growing public health

threat. The taskforce was created in record time and is now ready to begin

work.

The global taskforce is made up of WHO Member States, on a voluntary

basis, and more than 20 other major stakeholders, including Interpol, the

World Customs Associations, patients’ and medical organizations, the World

Bank, the World Trade Organization and the International Federation of

Pharmaceutical Manufacturers Associations.

The meeting is hosted and co-organized by the German Ministry of Health.

For more information on the task force and the meeting, please view:

http://www.who.int/medicines/services/counterfeit/en/index.html

All press releases, fact sheets and other WHO media material may be found

at http://www.who.int .

Journalists wishing to attend the Bonn meeting may send an e-mail to:

pressestelle@bmg.bund.de, Tel: +49-(0)-3018-441-2312, Fax: +49-(0)-3018-441-

1245.

Source: World Health Organization
collection