ISLAMABAD: Pakistan needs to move towards an automated system to inspect medicines and factories in order to become a member of the Pharmaceutical Inspection Cooperation Scheme (PICS) and avoid inspections of Pakistani medicines in 49 countries, a representative from United States Pharmacopeia said on Wednesday.

A USP team has been training 25 officials from the Drug Regulatory Authority of Pakistan (Drap) on good manufacturing practices, to build capacity and strengthen the inspection system.

Speaking to Dawn, USP representative Khalid Saeed Bukhari said that in a manual system, every inspector has a different approach to inspecting companies and factories, because of which, if two inspectors are sent to the same factory they will submit contradictory reports.

“The only option is to switch over to the automated system due to which there will be a checklist for everything and similar reports will be generated despite who inspects the factory. Moreover, because of automated system, it will become possible that all the things would be checked without any delay,” he said.

He said an automated system would make it possible to check if a company’s medicine had previously been rejected.

“Sometimes companies apply for medicines that have already been rejected, with different names. So all the departments should be working together and should have access to check how many products from a company have failed in the past.

“It is simple; if a company’s product has been failed, how can it manufacture a similar product under another name,” he asked.

According to an official statement issued on Wednesday, Mr Bukhari said everyone high expectations from the Drap officers to transform the working of the organisation and achieve World Health Organisation Level III functioning an PICS membership.

“By achieving level-III of National Regulatory Authority, Drap would be considered a performing regulatory authority by the WHO and by achieving PICS membership, foreign inspections from 49 countries would be exempted and Drap’s inspection would be considered reliable,” he said.

Published in Dawn, May 10th, 2018

Opinion

Editorial

Half measures
Updated 14 Dec, 2024

Half measures

The question remains: Were suspects' prolonged detention, subsequent trial, and punishments ever legal in eyes of the law?
Engaging with Kabul
14 Dec, 2024

Engaging with Kabul

WHILE relations with the Afghan Taliban have been testy of late, mainly because of the feeling in Islamabad that the...
Truant ministers
Updated 14 Dec, 2024

Truant ministers

LAWMAKERS from both the opposition and treasury benches have been up in arms about what they see as cabinet...
A political resolution
Updated 13 Dec, 2024

A political resolution

It seems that there has been some belated realisation that a power vacuum has been created at expense of civilian leadership.
High price increases
13 Dec, 2024

High price increases

FISCAL stabilisation prescribed by the IMF can be expensive — for the common people — in more ways than one. ...
Beyond HOTA
13 Dec, 2024

Beyond HOTA

IN a welcome demonstration of HOTA’s oversight role, kidney transplant services have been suspended at...