• About us
  • Presenters
  • Shows
  • VIDEOS
  • PODCASTS
Thursday, May 14, 2026
Angel Online
  • Home
  • Elections
  • Politics
  • News
    • Local News
  • Business
  • Education
  • Health
    • Lifestyle
  • Entertainment
  • Features
  • World
No Result
View All Result
  • Home
  • Elections
  • Politics
  • News
    • Local News
  • Business
  • Education
  • Health
    • Lifestyle
  • Entertainment
  • Features
  • World
No Result
View All Result
Angel Online
No Result
View All Result
Home World

‘Life-saving’ Covid-19 drugs sold on black market

Jerry Tsatro Mordy by Jerry Tsatro Mordy
July 7, 2020
in World, Top Story
Reading Time: 3 mins read
0 0
0
Hetero's brand name for remdesivir is Covifor | photo: HETERO

Hetero's brand name for remdesivir is Covifor | photo: HETERO

Share on FacebookShare on Twitter

A BBC investigation has found that two life-saving drugs used to treat Covid-19 patients in India – remdesivir and tocilizumab – are in short supply and being sold for excessive rates on a thriving black market. Vikas Pandey reports from the capital Delhi.

Abhinav Sharma’s uncle had very high fever and difficulty breathing when he was admitted to a hospital in Delhi.

He tested positive for coronavirus and doctors told the family to get remdesivir – an antiviral drug that’s been approved in India for clinical trial and also under “emergency use authorisation”, meaning doctors can prescribe it on compassionate grounds.

But procuring it proved an impossible task – remdesivir did not seem to be available anywhere.

Mr Sharma desperately called people to arrange for the drug as his uncle’s condition deteriorated by the hour.

“I had tears in my eyes. My uncle was fighting for his life and I was struggling to arrange the medicine that could possibly save him,” he said.

“After dozens of calls, I paid seven times the price to get the medicine. I was willing to pay any price really, but my heart goes out to people who can’t afford it,” he said.

Mr Sharma’s plight is familiar to many families in Delhi, desperate to do whatever it takes to save their loved ones. Some say they have been forced to pay exorbitant prices for the drug – many of those ending up at a medicine market in old Delhi.

Gilead
US-based Gilead has given five Indian companies authorisation to produce remdesivir | photo: GETTY IMAGES

The BBC was able to connect to people working at the market who said they could arrange the drug, but for the right price.

“I can get you three vials – but each will cost 30,000 rupees [$401; £321] and you have to come right away,” said one man, who claimed he worked in the “medicine business”.

The official price for each vial is 5,400 rupees, and a patient typically needs five to six doses. Another man quoted 38,000 rupees per vial.

The demand for remdesivir is driven by the fact that it has managed to cut the duration of Covid symptoms from 15 days down to 11 in clinical trial at hospitals around the world.

Experts have warned that it’s no “silver bullet”. But in the absence of any proven drug, doctors are increasingly prescribing it in India, driving demand in Delhi and other Indian cities.

The BBC has learned of several similar instances where families of patients in Delhi and neighbouring districts had to pay excessive prices for remdesivir. Some say they even spent their life’s savings to buy the drug – just to give a loved one a fighting chance to survive.

Healthcare workers screening people
The number of cases have sharply risen in India in June | photo HINDUSTAN TIMES

The main reason for this kind of profiteering seems to be a massive gap between supply and demand.

US-based Gilead Sciences, which originally developed remdesivir to treat Ebola, has allowed four Indian companies – Cipla, Jubilant Life, Hetero Drugs and Mylon – to produce it in India.

However, only one of these companies – Hetero- has produced it so far.

The company has distributed 20,000 doses of the drug between five states and told the BBC that it wasn’t sure how the “leakage” was happening.

“We have not given the medicine to our distributors. As per the guidelines, we have directly supplied the vials to hospitals,” Hetero’s vice-president of sales Sandeep Shahstri said.

He added that the firm was working hard to meet demand and “such black marketing was really demoralising”.

“We understand the pain of the families. They shouldn’t be told to go and hunt for the drug. We are confident of increasing our production in the next few days and the situation should get better.”

Pharmacists say they don’t have supplies of the drug either.

“A woman called me from Hyderabad last night. Her father is in a Delhi hospital – she said she would pay any amount to get the medicine. But there was nothing that I could do,” said Rajeev Tyagi, vice president of a chemists association in Ghaziabad near Delhi.

So how is the drug ending up at the medicine market in old Delhi?

Rajiv Singhal, general secretary of All India Chemists and Druggists Association – an umbrella body of medicine shop owners – denies that any shop owner is involved.

“I am sure that none of our members are involved in such practices. It’s a national health emergency and I want to give a clear message that strict action will be taken against if anyone is found to be selling life-saving medicines illegally,” he said.

A Covid hospital in Delhi
Many hospitals have been struggling to cope with the rise in cases | photo: GETTY IMAGES

But the issue appears to not just be with remdesivir. The prices of another life-saving drug, tocilizumab, have also exponentially gone up.

The drug, sold as Actemra, has shown positive results in critically ill patients around the world. Experts say more research is needed to fully understand its effectiveness, but many hospitals have reported positive results.

But the drug was originally meant for patients of rheumatoid arthritis and supply has always has been limited.

Ads Ads

Cipla sells the medicine in India on behalf of Switzerland-based Roche and it’s entirely imported. But it’s hard to find – especially when you in need it within hours.

A representative of Cipla in north India said demand has risen drastically in the past few weeks. “We have increased supply, but we expect demand will continue to grow in the coming days,” he said.

The BBC has learned of several cases where hospitals asked family members of patients to find the drug themselves.

RelatedPosts

I’ll resign if I fail to enforce rent laws in Ghana – Commissioner

NAIMOS gifts seized pumping machines to farmers to boost large-scale production

Government secures $300m to upgrade SHSs nationwide – Mahama

“I must have gone to 50 stores in Delhi. They all promised but asked for twice or thrice the price of each dose. It took me two days to get the number of doses needed for my aunt,” a Delhi resident, who did not wish to be identified, said.

But the Cipla representative denied that tocilizumab was being sold on the black market.

“We are tracking each dose to ensure that there is no profiteering. We won’t let that happen,” he said.

Some names have been changed on request.

Tags: CoronavirusCovid-19covifor
Jerry Tsatro Mordy

Jerry Tsatro Mordy

RelatedPosts

Rent Control Department has only two vehicles nationwide

I’ll resign if I fail to enforce rent laws in Ghana – Commissioner

by Samuel Sackey
May 14, 2026
0

The Acting Commissioner of Rent Control, Frederick Opoku, has put his job on the line amidst efforts to address the...

NAIMOS gifts seized pumping machines to farmers to boost large-scale production

by Samuel Sackey
May 13, 2026
0

In a significant move to repurpose seized assets for national development, Colonel Dominic Buah, the Director of Operations at the...

Government secures $300m to upgrade SHSs nationwide – Mahama

Government secures $300m to upgrade SHSs nationwide – Mahama

by Mubarak Yakubu
May 13, 2026
0

President John Dramani Mahama has announced that government has secured a 300 million dollar facility from the World Bank to...

Mahama promises end to double-track system by 2027

Mahama promises end to double-track system by 2027

by Mubarak Yakubu
May 13, 2026
0

President John Dramani Mahama has assured Ghanaians that the double-track system at the senior high school level will be phased...

Cocoa Processing Company interdicts two senior managers over GH¢473 million alleged misappropriation

Cocoa Processing Company interdicts two senior managers over GH¢473 million alleged misappropriation

by Georgina Appiah Amponsah
May 13, 2026
0

The Cocoa Processing Company Ltd. (CPC) has interdicted two of its senior managers, James Oduro and Abdul‑Samed Adams. The suspension...

Technical issues hit Weija water treatment plant

Technical issues hit Weija water treatment plant

by Georgina Appiah Amponsah
May 13, 2026
0

Ghana Water Ltd (GWL) has announced temporary water supply interruptions in parts of Western Accra due to technical challenges at...

Next Post
Coronavirus positive

992 new cases send Ghana's Covid-19 case count to 21,077

We’re excited: NDC women laud nomination of Prof. Opoku-Agyemang

We’re excited: NDC women laud nomination of Prof. Opoku-Agyemang

Connect with us

  • 870k Fans
  • 3.3k Followers
  • 278.1k Followers
  • 151k Subscribers

Category

  • Africa
  • Athletics
  • Business
  • Education
  • Elections
  • Entertainment
  • Features
  • Football
  • Health
  • Latest News
  • Lifestyle
  • Local News
  • Love and Sex
  • News
  • Opinion
  • Politics
  • Security
  • Sports
  • Tech
  • Top Story
  • Transportation
  • World
  • About us
  • Presenters
  • Shows
  • VIDEOS
  • PODCASTS

©2026- Angel Online

Welcome Back!

Login to your account below

Forgotten Password?

Retrieve your password

Please enter your username or email address to reset your password.

Log In

Add New Playlist

No Result
View All Result
  • Home
  • Elections
  • Politics
  • News
    • Local News
  • Business
  • Education
  • Health
    • Lifestyle
  • Entertainment
  • Features
  • World

©2026- Angel Online