GENERIC MEDS

spiderman

Member
Joined
Sep 11, 2014
Messages
177
This article was sent to me via a good friend who lives in India....It tends to affect a lot of people worldwide,,,,,

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Last year Teva recalled 40,000 bottles of medicine manufactured for it by India’s Emcure Pharmaceuticals.
In July, the FDA issued an “import alert” that effectively banned the import of drugs from Emcure’s Hinjwadi plant.
So far this year, six Indian co's have had their manufacturing sites blacklisted by the FDA. As a result, there are now 39 drugmaking facilities in India — owned by 27 different companies that have since lost clearance due to regulatory problems.
Indian companies make around 30 to 40% of the generic medicines taken in the US — a market worth $44bn, according to IBISWorld — as well as many drugs and vaccines used by global aid agencies for health programmes in poorer countries.
Now, they face a serious credibility crisis, as they battle to allay western regulators’ concerns about their manufacturing practices — especially the reliability of data from trials of their medicines.
Last month, the European Union banned 700 Indian-made generic drugs, citing doubts about the credibility of clinical trials carried out by GVK Biosciences, a Hyderabad-based research organisation.
Then, last week, the World Health Organisation warned Svizera Laboratories — one of four suppliers of tuberculosis drugs to its Stop TB Partnership — that inspections in July had raised “serious concerns about the integrity, reliability and accuracy of data generated and available at your manufacturing site, and on your ability to prevent contamination and cross-contamination of your products”.
“Trust has eroded so much among foreign regulators, I don’t think they take anything that’s said at face value,” warns Dinesh Thakur, the whistleblower in the Ranbaxy case, who now runs a consultancy focused on the pharmaceutical supply chain.
Nor is this a problem solely for small, obscure companies in India. Overseas regulators have been scrutinising and banning products from some of India’s biggest and most reputable groups — including Sun Pharmaceuticals, IPCA, and Wockhardt — many of which have ongoing relationships with large multinational drug companies.
Last year, growth in Indian drug exports slowed to 3%, according to the Pharmaceutical Export Council of India, a government organisation. For much of the past decade, growth had stood at a robust 12 to 13% a year.
Influential US pharmacy benefit managers, such as ExpressScripts and MerckMedco, are also increasingly concerned about their dependence on Indian suppliers — fearful that imports to the US market may be abruptly banned.
DG Shah, secretary of the Indian Pharmaceutical Alliance, an association of India’s top drug companies, acknowledges the industry is struggling to meet stringent US standards.
He says this reflects the inadequate training of lab technicians and supervisors, rather than any deliberate attempt to manipulate or falsify data by the companies’ management.
But Mr Thakur, the former whistleblower, says the problem is the lack of value that most Indians place on precision — and a general acceptance of low standards by company workers, owners and managers. “As a culture, we’ve accepted that if it meets 80 per cent of our requirements, that’s OK,” he says. “This is not a systemic pharmaceutical industry problem. This is a systemic cultural problem.”
Murali Neelakantan, former general counsel for Cipla, India’s fourth-largest drugmaker by sales, agrees that the Indian laboratory practices raising concerns among regulators have deep roots, but that it is an “organisational culture issue” for companies to train and incentivise their workers to follow global best practices, including sounding the alarm when tests point to quality problems.
“Indians as a rule don’t like to say no, and don’t like to give bad news and therefore test results always have to come out good,” he suggests. “You know what the test is supposed to say and you try to show that.”

 
 
 

 
This article was sent to me via a good friend who lives in India....It tends to affect a lot of people worldwide,,,,,

.......................................................................................

Last year Teva recalled 40,000 bottles of medicine manufactured for it by India’s Emcure Pharmaceuticals.
In July, the FDA issued an “import alert” that effectively banned the import of drugs from Emcure’s Hinjwadi plant.
So far this year, six Indian co's have had their manufacturing sites blacklisted by the FDA. As a result, there are now 39 drugmaking facilities in India — owned by 27 different companies that have since lost clearance due to regulatory problems.
Indian companies make around 30 to 40% of the generic medicines taken in the US — a market worth $44bn, according to IBISWorld — as well as many drugs and vaccines used by global aid agencies for health programmes in poorer countries.
Now, they face a serious credibility crisis, as they battle to allay western regulators’ concerns about their manufacturing practices — especially the reliability of data from trials of their medicines.
Last month, the European Union banned 700 Indian-made generic drugs, citing doubts about the credibility of clinical trials carried out by GVK Biosciences, a Hyderabad-based research organisation.
Then, last week, the World Health Organisation warned Svizera Laboratories — one of four suppliers of tuberculosis drugs to its Stop TB Partnership — that inspections in July had raised “serious concerns about the integrity, reliability and accuracy of data generated and available at your manufacturing site, and on your ability to prevent contamination and cross-contamination of your products”.
“Trust has eroded so much among foreign regulators, I don’t think they take anything that’s said at face value,” warns Dinesh Thakur, the whistleblower in the Ranbaxy case, who now runs a consultancy focused on the pharmaceutical supply chain.
Nor is this a problem solely for small, obscure companies in India. Overseas regulators have been scrutinising and banning products from some of India’s biggest and most reputable groups — including Sun Pharmaceuticals, IPCA, and Wockhardt — many of which have ongoing relationships with large multinational drug companies.
Last year, growth in Indian drug exports slowed to 3%, according to the Pharmaceutical Export Council of India, a government organisation. For much of the past decade, growth had stood at a robust 12 to 13% a year.
Influential US pharmacy benefit managers, such as ExpressScripts and MerckMedco, are also increasingly concerned about their dependence on Indian suppliers — fearful that imports to the US market may be abruptly banned.
DG Shah, secretary of the Indian Pharmaceutical Alliance, an association of India’s top drug companies, acknowledges the industry is struggling to meet stringent US standards.
He says this reflects the inadequate training of lab technicians and supervisors, rather than any deliberate attempt to manipulate or falsify data by the companies’ management.
But Mr Thakur, the former whistleblower, says the problem is the lack of value that most Indians place on precision — and a general acceptance of low standards by company workers, owners and managers. “As a culture, we’ve accepted that if it meets 80 per cent of our requirements, that’s OK,” he says. “This is not a systemic pharmaceutical industry problem. This is a systemic cultural problem.”
Murali Neelakantan, former general counsel for Cipla, India’s fourth-largest drugmaker by sales, agrees that the Indian laboratory practices raising concerns among regulators have deep roots, but that it is an “organisational culture issue” for companies to train and incentivise their workers to follow global best practices, including sounding the alarm when tests point to quality problems.
“Indians as a rule don’t like to say no, and don’t like to give bad news and therefore test results always have to come out good,” he suggests. “You know what the test is supposed to say and you try to show that.”

 
 
 
I wish I had found this website and this post before I placed orders with Indian based companies.  Every shipment I got from several different pharmacies were fakes.  I thought I was being smart by scouting the sites online, and not seeing any bad feedback, thought they must be reliable, credible companies.  I can't believe how scammed I was, and am just sick at the money I lost.  Lesson learned, I guess, but an expensive one.  I did get a refund on one order, so I guess I got lucky there.  My friend tells me to leave the others alone and just take the loss or the "Indian Mafia" will come calling...

 
I get generic at my pharmacy and they see to be just as good.  Where is a good lace to get good pain meds on here?

 
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no matter how much you tell her to read the forum,..all she keeps asking or is where are pain meds....:/

 
Drugbuyersguide Shoutbox
  1. Candyshop @ Candyshop: how you feeling Maol last we sold just making sure your good anything I can go
  2. moai @ moai: @CalFresh Nah it doesn’t hurt to me but some ppl complain abt it, but I do 200mg per pin. So if you wanted a higher dose than that each I’d do multiple spots. Also I only recently got gluta from somewhere that wasn’t pharma grade, and these don’t even hurt either.
  3. moai @ moai: @neurowoot Bro no offense but that protocol seems so cope. Why aren’t you just on TRT?
  4. D @ drdrizzy13: I started going slightly grey in high school
  5. tiquanunderwood @ tiquanunderwood: I'm 35 with a full head of hair so very grateful. I take that shit serious haha.
  6. tiquanunderwood @ tiquanunderwood: Enclopmiphene raised me to 800s and I did gailn more muscle but nothing compared to 150mg.T. I don't have male pattern baldness as neither of my older brothers are, and our mom's dad had a full head of hair which is where the gene comes from. I just found the minimal effective dose that also gave me the look I like and I've had no estrogen issues or acne. But there's always aromasin and accutane
  7. N @ neurowoot: Layne_Cobain, slightly cheaper option, has an okay success rate... HCG and Kisspeptin, alternating days (mostly). Brought me from 319 to 540. Not the worst. HCG specifically helps with balls volume haha
  8. L @ Layne_Cobain: I’ve always had severe anxiety also but I think the chronically low t (125 total) for 5 plus years now is making it worse…did trt help you with anxiety or depression if you had any of that?
  9. L @ Layne_Cobain: @tiquanunderwood did the enclomiphene not do much for yah? Yeah it’s not so much being on it for life as the side effects-shrinking nuts, hair loss, infertility exc
  10. tiquanunderwood @ tiquanunderwood: But if you're afraid of inj3cting or being on it for life, once I started it I was more than cool with being on it forever. I feel so much fucking better.
  11. tiquanunderwood @ tiquanunderwood: I used enclomiphene for a few months, then hopped on TRT a few years ago at 32. 0p1ates destroyed my endocrine system, even while off them for over a year my T levels were about 150 ng/dl. TRT best decision I ever made, and $200 covers the whole year for me. Excluding bloodwork of course.
  12. tiquanunderwood @ tiquanunderwood: Think you've had enough :) Happy almost Friday everyone!
  13. MrFuszy @ MrFuszy: Grab some dope*
  14. MrFuszy @ MrFuszy: Dude when did my life change From going down the steet to grab some sbkrz to scoring from Switzerland, Poland, Austria, Spain, EU -_-
  15. MrFuszy @ MrFuszy: Load*
  16. MrFuszy @ MrFuszy: Someone loae me w bowl of GO
  17. MrFuszy @ MrFuszy: Hey wait not with ou4 me
  18. L @ Layne_Cobain: @TheNinez thanks bro I think I’m gonna give it a go even tho it’s quite expensive but if it can make me feel much better it’s worth it
  19. CalFresh @ CalFresh: @moat I considered it but the recommended doses sound huge for IM. Doesn't it hurt like a MF to inject so muich? I remember getting a PCN shot at the local planned parenthood long long ago and even that little amoutn had me sore for a couple days
  20. proton369 @ proton369: 💎💎💎💎💎💎💎💎
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