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The Washington Times Online Edition

Some donated malaria drugs being stolen in Africa

In this Monday, Aug. 30, 2010 photo, Ayo Bello displays a box of Coartem malaria medication, packaged for the commercial market, at a pharmacy in Lagos, Nigeria. Millions of free malaria drugs are sent to Africa every year by international donors. New research is now providing evidence for what health workers have long suspected: some of the donated medication, readily identifiable by its different packaging, is being stolen and resold on commercial markets. (AP Photo/Sunday Alamba)In this Monday, Aug. 30, 2010 photo, Ayo Bello displays a box of Coartem malaria medication, packaged for the commercial market, at a pharmacy in Lagos, Nigeria. Millions of free malaria drugs are sent to Africa every year by international donors. New research is now providing evidence for what health workers have long suspected: some of the donated medication, readily identifiable by its different packaging, is being stolen and resold on commercial markets. (AP Photo/Sunday Alamba)

LONDON (AP) - Millions of free malaria drugs are sent to Africa every year by international donors. New research is now providing evidence for what health workers have long suspected: some of the donated medication is being stolen and resold on commercial markets.

During three periods from 2007 to 2010, American and British experts bought malaria medicines randomly from private pharmacies in 11 African cities. Of the 894 samples, they found 58, or 6.5 percent, were supposed to have been donated to government hospitals and clinics.

The study will be published Thursday in the journal Research and Reports in Tropical Medicine and was paid for by the Legatum Institute, a U.S. philanthropic group with no ties to drug makers.

The finding was particularly strong in artemesinin combination drugs, the best available malaria drugs, and those often purchased by international donors. In 2007, they found about 15 percent of such donated drugs had been stolen for resale. This year, it was nearly 30 percent.

The authors acknowledge the sample sizes were small and could exaggerate the problem. Outside experts said donated drugs regularly disappear across corruption-plagued Africa and that the research was credible. There have been no large-scale published studies analyzing the problem.

“The study is important because it clearly documents something that we need to study (the issue) more closely,” said Tido von Schoen-Angerer, a director at Medecins Sans Frontieres, which works across Africa.

Von Schoen-Angerer said it is extremely difficult to determine the scale of the problem since drugs are not often followed from their origin to their ultimate destination in Africa.

According to an audit last year by the U.S. President’s Malaria Initiative, about $640,000 worth of medicines sent to Angola vanished from airports and the government’s medicines warehouse.

“Critical malaria commodities are not reaching their intended beneficiaries and more Angolans may be unnecessary victims,” the report said.

“We’ve heard about this kind of corruption anecdotally for years,” said Julian Harris, a health expert at International Policy Network, a London-based think tank. He was not linked to the study. “But the response from funders has been to keep throwing millions of dollars’ worth of these medicines into countries, even when there is evidence the drugs aren’t reaching the needy.”

In the study, Roger Bate, a fellow at American Enterprise Institute in Washington DC, and colleagues focused on the most popular artemesinin combination malaria drug, Coartem, made by Novartis AG. They bought it in private markets in Ghana, Kenya, Tanzania, Uganda, Rwanda and Nigeria. Other drugs from Sanofi Aventis, Cipla and dozens of other companies were also included.

Novartis makes two versions of the drug for Africa: the one to be donated comes in a flat white packet with a blister sheet of pills while the one for commercial markets is sold in an orange and white box.

Bate, an economist who studies health policy, found donated drugs originally meant for Nigeria on sale in Kenya, drugs with “Not for Sale” stamped on them, and drugs packaged in the wrong local language, which suggests they were stolen from aid deliveries.

Novartis declined to comment on the issue.

The donated medicines were first bought by the Global Fund to fight AIDS, Tuberculosis and Malaria and the U.S. President’s Malaria Initiative, a joint program led by the U.S. Agency for International Development and the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. Both the Global Fund and the President’s Malaria Initiative receive funds from international donors, including U.S. taxpayers.

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Copyright 2012 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.

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