Drug Problem or Medicrime? Distribution and Use of Falsified Tramadol Medication in Egypt and West Africa

<p class="p1">Tramadol is a synthetic opioid that is widely used as an analgesic for alleviating pain of moderate to medium intensity. With potency estimated to be about one-tenth that of morphine, tramadol is considered as relatively safe with regard to poisonings or dependency. Yet...

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Main Author: Axel Klein
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: LSE Press 2019-01-01
Series:Journal of Illicit Economies and Development
Subjects:
Online Access:https://jied.lse.ac.uk/articles/10
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author Axel Klein
author_facet Axel Klein
author_sort Axel Klein
collection DOAJ
description <p class="p1">Tramadol is a synthetic opioid that is widely used as an analgesic for alleviating pain of moderate to medium intensity. With potency estimated to be about one-tenth that of morphine, tramadol is considered as relatively safe with regard to poisonings or dependency. Yet there are increasing reports of widespread non-medical consumption of tramadol in North and West Africa. The Egyptian government has requested the UN Commission of Narcotic Drugs to put tramadol under international control. This will have profound implications for the treatment of acute and chronic pain across developing countries where tramadol is often the only available analgesic, because controlled substances are impossible to obtain for health care practitioners. The tramadol sold outside of medical establishments is often adulterated and substandard, part of the massive trade in falsified medicines that is possibly far more devastating than the hedonic use of psychoactive substances. Yet the international machinery in place to control medical products is feeble and the penalties for medicrime are modest next to drug trafficking offences. The article suggests that international controls need to re-assess their priorities to focus on human and patient well-being. A further shift is needed away from repressive measures against consumers, to tighter regulation in the production and distribution of medications and pharmaceutical substances. This must involve a wide range of stakeholders, including health care practitioners, the pharmaceutical industry, pharmacists, patients associations, and the public at large.<span class="Apple-converted-space"> </span></p>
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spelling doaj.art-43e92db93d6349f8baae219605516e1f2023-01-04T15:01:01ZengLSE PressJournal of Illicit Economies and Development2516-72272019-01-0111526210.31389/jied.108Drug Problem or Medicrime? Distribution and Use of Falsified Tramadol Medication in Egypt and West AfricaAxel Klein0Global Drug Policy Observatory, University of Swansea<p class="p1">Tramadol is a synthetic opioid that is widely used as an analgesic for alleviating pain of moderate to medium intensity. With potency estimated to be about one-tenth that of morphine, tramadol is considered as relatively safe with regard to poisonings or dependency. Yet there are increasing reports of widespread non-medical consumption of tramadol in North and West Africa. The Egyptian government has requested the UN Commission of Narcotic Drugs to put tramadol under international control. This will have profound implications for the treatment of acute and chronic pain across developing countries where tramadol is often the only available analgesic, because controlled substances are impossible to obtain for health care practitioners. The tramadol sold outside of medical establishments is often adulterated and substandard, part of the massive trade in falsified medicines that is possibly far more devastating than the hedonic use of psychoactive substances. Yet the international machinery in place to control medical products is feeble and the penalties for medicrime are modest next to drug trafficking offences. The article suggests that international controls need to re-assess their priorities to focus on human and patient well-being. A further shift is needed away from repressive measures against consumers, to tighter regulation in the production and distribution of medications and pharmaceutical substances. This must involve a wide range of stakeholders, including health care practitioners, the pharmaceutical industry, pharmacists, patients associations, and the public at large.<span class="Apple-converted-space"> </span></p>https://jied.lse.ac.uk/articles/10tramadolsynthetic opioidswest africaegyptmedicrimeregulationpharmaceutical industryfalsified medicines
spellingShingle Axel Klein
Drug Problem or Medicrime? Distribution and Use of Falsified Tramadol Medication in Egypt and West Africa
Journal of Illicit Economies and Development
tramadol
synthetic opioids
west africa
egypt
medicrime
regulation
pharmaceutical industry
falsified medicines
title Drug Problem or Medicrime? Distribution and Use of Falsified Tramadol Medication in Egypt and West Africa
title_full Drug Problem or Medicrime? Distribution and Use of Falsified Tramadol Medication in Egypt and West Africa
title_fullStr Drug Problem or Medicrime? Distribution and Use of Falsified Tramadol Medication in Egypt and West Africa
title_full_unstemmed Drug Problem or Medicrime? Distribution and Use of Falsified Tramadol Medication in Egypt and West Africa
title_short Drug Problem or Medicrime? Distribution and Use of Falsified Tramadol Medication in Egypt and West Africa
title_sort drug problem or medicrime distribution and use of falsified tramadol medication in egypt and west africa
topic tramadol
synthetic opioids
west africa
egypt
medicrime
regulation
pharmaceutical industry
falsified medicines
url https://jied.lse.ac.uk/articles/10
work_keys_str_mv AT axelklein drugproblemormedicrimedistributionanduseoffalsifiedtramadolmedicationinegyptandwestafrica