After he was struck down by malaria and typhoid, Togolese tailor Ayawo Hievi thought he was set to recover when he started taking drugs prescribed by his doctor.
However, far from curing him, the medication he was given at the neighborhood clinic made him far worse — eventually costing him one of his kidneys. The drugs were fake.
“After four days of care, there was no improvement, but I started to feel pain in my belly,” 52-year-old Hievi told reporters.
After two weeks of suffering he became unable to walk and was rushed to a university hospital in the West African nation’s capital, Lome.
“The doctors told me that my kidneys had been damaged... The quinine and the antibiotics used to treat me in the medical office were fake drugs,” Hievi said.
Now, more than four years later, he remains crippled by chronic kidney failure and has to receive dialysis regularly.
Hievi’s horror story is far from unique in a continent awash with counterfeit medicines.
The WHO has estimated that every year about 100,000 people in Africa die from taking “falsified or substandard” medication.
The American Society of Tropical Medicine and Hygiene in 2015 estimated that 122,000 children younger than five died due to taking poor-quality anti-malaria drugs in sub-Saharan Africa.
Weak legislation, poor healthcare systems and widespread poverty have encouraged the growth of this parallel — and deadly — market.
Since 2013, Africa has made up 42 percent of the fake medicine seized worldwide.
The two drugs most likely to be out-of-date or poor, ineffective copies are antibiotics and anti-malarials, experts said.
Bogus drugs not only pose a risk to the patient — they also play a worrying part in building resistance to vital frontline medications.
In a bid to tackle the scourge, presidents from seven countries — the Republic of the Congo, the Gambia, Ghana, Niger, Senegal, Togo and Uganda — are to meet tomorrow in Lome to sign an agreement on criminalizing the trafficking of fake drugs.
The goal is to bolster cooperation between governments and encourage other African nations to join the initiative.
However, even if leaders put pen to paper, the task of stamping out the flows of counterfeit medication is huge. Medicines spread out on plastic sheets or offered at ramshackle stalls are for sale at markets across west Africa.
Those hawked on the streets are often a fraction of the price of what is available in more reputable pharmacies, where controls are stricter and supplies often have to come through official channels.
“It is very difficult to trace where the fake medicines come from,” said Innocent Kounde Kpeto, the president of Togo’s pharmacist association.
“The countries which are mentioned on the boxes are often not the countries of origin or manufacture of these drugs. The manufacturers cover their tracks so as not to be identified,” Kpeto said.
It is estimated that between 30 percent and 60 percent of medicine sold in Africa is fake, and Kpeto said that most of it comes from China or India.
Togo is one of the pioneer countries trying to stop the flow. It changed the law in 2015, and now traffickers can face 20 years in jail and a fine of about US$85,000.
In a show of force in July last year, authorities burned more than 67 tonnes of counterfeit pharmaceuticals.
However, even given these successes, those in the industry like Kpeto insist that the threat is still grave and involves “highly organized criminal networks.”
The fake medicines are smuggled in the same way as guns or narcotics and often bring higher returns.
Nigeria, Africa’s most populous country with 200 million people, is the No. 1 destination on the continent for fake drugs and a showcase of the difficulties being faced.
In September 2016, the World Customs Organization seized tens of millions of fake pills and medicines at 16 ports in Africa: 35 percent were intended for Nigeria. Across the vast nation there are tens of thousands of vendors selling the counterfeits.
Competition between traffickers is fierce and the official agency meant to combat the problem is overwhelmed.
In 2017, Vivian Nwakah founded start-up Medsaf and raised US$1.4 million to help Nigerians track their medication from producer to user.
“The country doesn’t have a reliable and centralized distribution network,” she said. “A hospital sometimes has to deal with 30 or 40 distributors for all the medications it needs. How can you have quality control with so many suppliers?”
As a result, fake or faulty medicine has not just flooded markets, but also pharmacies and hospitals — both state and private.
Sometimes, without hospital administrators even being aware, that means the drugs that reach the patients can be expired, poorly stored or the wrong doses.
Medsaf works to ensure the quality control of thousands of products at more 130 hospitals and pharmacies in Nigeria, and hopes to expand deeper into Nigeria, as well as the Ivory Coast and Senegal.
The company uses technology, database management and analytics to monitor the movement of medications, and verifies their official registration number, expiry dates and storage conditions.
“Technology we use can help to solve most of the issues related to fake drugs,” Nwakah said. “People die for nothing. We can change that.”
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