RAWALPINDI: It was a hard day for patients as all chemist shops remained closed on Monday in protest against the Punjab Drugs Amendment Bill 2017 recently passed by the provincial assembly.
On the other hand, the government failed to ensure the availability of essential medicines in hospitals forcing the citizens to rush to Islamabad to purchase drugs where medical stores remained open.
The druggists, chemists and manufacturers also took out rallies on Murree Road, The Mall and other busy arteries, triggering traffic jams.
The provincial assembly passed the bill on February 8 under which the manufacturer, importer or seller of a spurious, adulterated or unregistered drug shall be punished with three to 10 years’ imprisonment and fined Rs25 million to Rs50 million.
The dealers and manufacturers joined the strike on the call of Pakistan Chemists and Druggists Association.
Citizens had to buy essential medicines from Islamabad
“The doctor at a private clinic suggested a fluid infusion to treat my father for dehydration and handed me a prescription. As all medical stores in Rawalpindi were closed I had to rush to I-9 Islamabad to purchase the drugs,” said Mohammad Azhar, a resident of Khayaban-i-Sir Syed.
He said doctors and chemists should not go on any strike as it badly affected patients. “It is the responsibility of the local administration to ensure the provision of medicines in the market,” he said.
Malik Rehan, the attendant of a patient at the District Headquarters Hospital, said doctors prescribed an injection for his mother and he wasted three hours in search of a shop in Raja Bazaar and Saddar.
“Some people informed me to go to Islamabad where chemist shops were open and I managed to get the medicine from there,” he said.