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The Pharmacy Council of Nigeria (PCN) Thursday sealed a total number of 571 patent medicine shops, illegal Medicine shops and pharmacies. The ships were shut in Tafawa Balewa, Darazo, Ganjuwa, Alkaleri, Dambam, Kirfi, Ningi, Toro as well as Dass local government areas of Bauchi state for various offences and breach of laws and regulations. Addressing a press conference at the PCN North East zonal office in Bauchi, the Director and Head of Enforcement Department national headquarters of PCN, Pharm.

Stephen Esumobi, noted that the that sealed premises did not take steps to improve their storage facilities. Other offences committed by owners of pharmaceutical premises according to him, include operating without registration and non-renewal of premises certificates, poor documentation, patent medicine vendors stocking medicines outside the approved drug list and carrying out clinical services, wholesalers engaging in retail, pharmacies operating without a superintendent pharmacist. He also said that the Illegal medicine dealers were also found to engage in the sale of large quantities of substances of abuse to members of the public especially within the state capital thus aggravating the social and security challenges emanating from the illicit use of such medicines.



He added that some patent medicine stores within Bauchi metropolis were found to be stocking large quantities of used needles and syringes which are suspected to be re-used or sold to other medicine dealers operating in the rural areas and gave a breakdown of premises that were sealed as thirty seven (37) pharmacies, one hundred and forty four (144) Patent medicine shops and three hundred and ninety (390) illegal medicine shops. He said: “In 2022 the PCN enforcement team visited Bauchi state and some medicine outlets were sealed for operating in breach of our laws and regulations. The Council took steps to correct anomalies observed in those premises”.

“The PCN staff met with owners of such premises and most of them gave assurance that they will comply with our laws and regulations. The PCN through our state and zonal offices took steps to guide owners of medicine shops on steps they needed to take to operate in line with the law.“ The director further said for medicines to deliver desired therapeutic outcomes, it is important that they remain safe, effective and of good quality throughout their shelf life, and one of the identified factors that affect stability and therapeutic benefits of medicines is good storage facilities with appropriate temperature and humidity control.

He added that, „Exposure of medicines to unfavorable environmental factors leads to product instability and degradation. Poor quality medicines have been shown in several studies to be responsible for a large percentage of cases of treatment failures and avoidable deaths. “At the end of the exercise a total of seven hundred and sixty two (762) premises were visited.

This is made up of eighty eight (88) pharmacies, two hundred and eighty four (284) Patent Medicine Shops and three hundred and ninety (390) Illegal premises.“ Pharmacist Esumobi said the state and Zonal offices of the PCN have been directed to continue to monitor all pharmaceutical premises within the state to ensure that they operate in line with our laws and regulations..

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