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Govt hints nexus between private, state-owned vaccine units

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Press Trust of India New Delhi

Hinting that a nexus between private and state-owned vaccine companies could have led to gradual decline in production capacity of state-owned units, the government today said the matter required in depth probe.

"Till recently the production of the three government units was 80 per cent and then it came down to just around 10 per cent. There is something wrong. I smell a nexus between these units and private sector," Health Minister Ghulam Nabi Azad said in the Rajya Sabha.

Replying to supplementaries during Question Hour, he pointed out that prices of vaccines produced in private units were shooting up.

 

"I can't say it was done (decline in production in government units) to help private units. But it could be a possibility. This needs an in depth probe and an external agency needs to look into it," he said.

He said manufacturing licenses of three state-owned vaccine institutes namely Central Research Institute (Kasauli), Pasteur Institute of India in Coonoor (Tamil Nadu), and BCG Vaccine Laboratory in Chennai were suspended in January 2008.

This was done as the units were not found in compliance with the Good Manufacturing Practices (GMP) as provided under Schedule M of Drugs and Cosmetics Rules 1945, he said.

CRI (Kasauli) was established in 1905, PII (Coonoor) in 1907 and the Chennai unit in 1948.

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First Published: Jul 24 2009 | 4:39 PM IST

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