Tag: Uzbekistan

  • India halts production of syrup linked to Uzbekistan’s child deaths

    India halts production of syrup linked to Uzbekistan’s child deaths

    Canada Global (Web News) The medicines regulator for India announced on Thursday that it had visited a factory that produced a cough syrup that was connected to the deaths of 19 children in Uzbekistan and had committed to take further action in light of its findings.

    An attorney for Marion Biotech, the Indian business that makes Dok-1 Max syrup, claimed the company was sorry for the fatalities and has stopped production.

    According to a statement from the Indian Health Ministry, the regulator examined the company’s Noida plant in the state of Uttar Pradesh and communicates frequently with its Uzbekistan counterpart.

    “Samples of cough syrup were taken from the manufacturing premises and sent to the Regional Drugs Testing Laboratory in Chandigarh for testing,” according to the ministry.

    According to Uzbekistan’s health ministry, at least 18 children in Samarkand died after consuming the syrup manufactured by the Indian drugmaker. On Thursday, the Uzbek news site report.uz reported the death of another one-year-old child, citing the regional prosecutor’s office.

  • 18 children dead in Uzbekistan after consuming India-made syrup, ministry says

    18 children dead in Uzbekistan after consuming India-made syrup, ministry says

    Canada Global (Web News) According to the Uzbek Health Ministry, at least 18 children have passed away in Uzbekistan as a result of using a medical syrup produced by the Indian pharmaceutical company Marion Biotech.

    According to the ministry, 18 of 21 children who took Doc-1 Max syrup while suffering from an acute respiratory illness died soon after taking it. On the company’s website, it is marketed as a treatment for cold and flu symptoms.

    According to the ministry, ethylene glycol, a hazardous chemical, was found in a batch of the syrup. Quramax Medical imported the syrup into Uzbekistan, according to a statement released by the ministry.

    Furthermore, it claimed that the syrup was administered to children at home in amounts greater than those recommended for children without a doctor’s prescription, either by the children’s parents or on the advice of pharmacists.

    It was unclear right first if every child had swallowed the questionable batch, had taken more than the recommended dosage, or had done both.