CHENGDU, Feb. 4 (Chinese media) -- The health authorities in
southwest China's Sichuan Province have found 215 bottles of a counterfeit
diabetes drug that last month caused two deaths and hospitalized nine others in
northwestern Xinjiang Uygur Autonomous Region.
No one has been reported sick after taking the drug
so far, said a spokesman of the provincial food and drug safety bureau on
Wednesday.
The spokesman said 144 bottles have been sold out,
while 71 bottles have been recovered from pharmacies and customers.
Most of the fake drugs were found in a drug store in
Jiangyou City. They were also found in Nantong and Guangyuan cities.
According to initial investigation, the deadly drugs
entered Sichuan market from the northeastern Liaoning Province.
Sichuan will continue efforts to search for the drug,
the spokesman said. Local police have begun investigating the case.
The counterfeit drug, branded "Tang Zhi Ning Jiao
Nang," was confirmed to contain an illegal chemical ingredient "glibenclamide,"
which is used to help lower blood sugar. But the counterfeit drugs contained six
times the normal dose of the chemical.
The Kashi authorities, in the western part of
Xinjiang, reported two people died on Jan. 17 and 19 after taking the drugs.
Four others, in stable condition, are receiving treatment in a hospital of
Kashi.
According to the State Food and Drug Administration (SFDA),
police had sealed up 9,391 bottles in Xinjiang as of Sunday, 2,663 of
which were seized from customers.
The SFDA said on Monday that four suspects had been
detained in Xinjiang for selling the deadly drug but gave no details about the
suspects.
Authorities have said that their preliminary
investigation showed that the counterfeit drug was not produced in Xinjiang, but
they have so far failed to find its source.

No comments:
Post a Comment