Xun Fubo, deputy director of the Food and Drug Administration of
Qiqihar, northeast China's Heilongjiang Province, has been sacked
for negligence of duty over a fake drug case that caused the death
of 11 patients.
The police has also detained 10 persons involved in the case,
including former general manager of Qiqihar No. 2 Pharmaceutical
Co., Ltd. that produced the fake Armillarisin A injection, for
further investigation.
"This is a serious fake drug case caused by the use of fake
materials, which quality inspectors failed to stop," said a member
of the investigation team, participated by the Ministry of
Supervision, Ministry of Public Security, Ministry of Health, as
well as State Food and Drug Administration.
"Relevant drug and industry and commerce administrations have
also seriously neglected their duties and failed to perform their
functions well in this case," he said.
Drug authorities in south China's Guangdong Province reported on
May 3 that patients using the injection had developed acute kidney
failure symptoms, which prompted immediate investigations into the
case.
It has been found out that Wang Guiping, a drug dealer in
Taixing of Jiangsu Province, forged production documents and sold
"propylene glycol" as a raw material for producing Armillarisin A
injection to the Qiqihar drug plant in October 2005. Wang's
"propylene glycol" was actually diglycol, an industrial material
which causes acute kidney failure if taken by humans.
The buyer and quality inspector at the drug plant failed to find
the problem and allowed the fake raw material to be used in
producing Armillarisin A injection.
After using the fake drug, 11 patients in two hospitals in
Guangdong developed acute kidney failure and died.
(Xinhua News Agency July 20, 2006)