Thursday, April 26, 2012
Abay Poster Exhibition and Hall (Millennium Hall)
Counterfeit drugs are a global problem with significant and well documented consequences for global health and patient safety, including patient deaths. This multibillion-dollar industry does not respect geopolitical borders and threatens public health in both rich and resource-poor countries alike. The epidemiology of counterfeits is also wide in breadth and scope, including thousands of counterfeit incidents per year, encompassing all types of therapeutic classes, and employing a complex global supply chain network enabling this illegal activity. In addition, information technology available through the Internet and sales via online pharmacies have allowed the criminal element to thrive in an unregulated environment of anonymity, deception, and lack of adequate enforcement. Though recent global enforcement efforts have led to arrests of online counterfeit sellers, such actions have not stemmed supplies from illegal online sellers nor kept up with their creativity in illegally selling their products. To address this issue, we propose a global policy framework utilizing public-private partnership models with centralized surveillance reporting that would enable cooperation and coordination to combat this global health crisis.
Learning Objectives: Identify and describe the epidemiology and scope of global counterfeit medicines and global crime supporting this illicit activity Assess impact of global counterfeits on resource-poor, emerging, and developed countries and the limitations of current policy efforts Formulate a global policy proposal to create public-private partnership models that will centralize surveillance and enforcement efforts