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Villagers at risk from expired medicines

China Daily | Updated: 2016-08-29 07:35

A SURVEY SHOWS THAT about 70 percent of urban families have a medicine chest at home, but most of the medicines will expire without being used. As a result, a vicious chain has emerged, in which people purchase the expired medicines and then sell them for use in the rural regions. Gmw.cn commented:

Some of the expired medicines are sold directly to the rural clinics that mainly serve senior citizens whose adult children have left the villages to work in cities; some are packaged again, given a new label and production date, then sold to relatively bigger rural hospitals. Such medicines are a risk to rural residents.

The problem has multiple causes. First, there is no legal channel for recycling expired medicines, so some families sell their expired medicines to illegal "recycling" businesses. Second, as most of the young villagers migrate to cities to work, those left behind are mainly old people or children, who are vulnerable to being exploited by the unscrupulous medicine dealers and medical practitioners.

Villagers at risk from expired medicines

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