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Restoring Oxytocin Sale - Delhi High Court Order

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December 18, 2018

Why in news?

The Delhi High Court has quashed a government ban on the retail sale and private manufacture of oxytocin. Click here to know more on the ban.

Why was the ban challenged?

  • Union Ministry of Health and Family Welfare earlier notified the ban of oxytocin.
  • This was after widespread concerns with the misuse of the drug in dairy cattle, fruits and vegetables.
  • But the ban was opposed as oxytocin is a life-saving drug used to stop post-partum bleeding among new mothers.
  • Around 45,000 women die from post-partum complications in India each year, and in 38% of the cases, haemorrhaging is the reason.
  • Without the easy availability of inexpensive oxytocin, addressing the maternal mortality epidemic could have been difficult.
  • In fact, oxytocin had been listed by both the World Health Organization and the Health Ministry as an essential medicine.
  • So the All India Drug Action Network (AIDAN), a patient-rights group, challenged the government ban in the Delhi High Court.

What is the Delhi High Court's rationale?

  • The ban came despite the fact that all statutory bodies, including the Drugs Technical Advisory Board, had advised against a ban.
  • There was no scientific basis to the conclusion that oxytocin's existing availability/manner of distribution posed a risk to human life.
  • So in response to AIDAN’s and drug manufacturers’ petitions, the court struck down the ban, calling it “unreasonable and arbitrary”.
  • It thus restored the retail sale and private manufacture of a life-saving drug, oxytocin.
  • The government failed to weigh the adverse effect, to the public in general and women in particular, of possible restricted supply if manufacture is confined to one unit.
  • The scarcity or even a restricted availability can cause increase in maternal fatalities, during childbirth.
  • Notably, the Karnataka Antibiotics & Pharmaceuticals Limited (the only authorised producer after the ban) did not have the capability to manufacture it until mid-2017.
  • The Centre has put down licensed manufacturers with a proven track record, while roping in this state firm with no real experience.
  • It had also failed to show that the drug was widely misused for veterinary purposes, the actual reason behind the ban.
  • Also, though the Centre claims to have made 25 illegal drug seizures across India in a 3-year period, 12 of them did not actually find oxytocin.
  • Among those that did, none involved licensed drugmakers.

What lies ahead?

  • The whole oxytocin episode calls for the policy-makers to reflect on the process that led to the ill-conceived order.
  • The basis for the Centre to overrule the advice of multiple statutory bodies should be investigated.
  • The reason for the government to accept the reports of the drug’s misuse without any valid proofs should be looked into.
  • The country needs a relook on the mechanism for health policy-making, for it to safeguard the right to health of Indian citizens.

 

Source: The Hindu

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