Share on facebook
Facebook
Share on twitter
Twitter
Share on email
Email

FDA: 3rd hospital allowed to use Ivermectin vs. Covid

Share on facebook
Facebook
Share on twitter
Twitter
Share on email
Email

A third hospital has been granted a compassionate special permit (CSP) to use the anti-parasitic drug Ivermectin as a treatment for the coronavirus disease, the Food and Drug Administration confirmed yesterday.

During the hearing of the House Committee of Good Government and Public Accountability, FDA Director General Eric Domingo said the unnamed health facility received the permit allowing the use of the mainly veterinary drug to treat their Covid-19 patients on Wednesday.

The CSP is valid for one year and can only be used by doctors of these hospitals.

Deputy Speaker Bernadette Herrera, during the hearing, urged the FDA to widen the list of drugs for emergency use to give doctors more choices as to the treatment they will give their Covid-19 patients.

“Our goal should always be for Covid-19 treatment protocols and prevention accessible and affordable to Filipinos,” Herrera said.

She also told the FDA to look into the national guidelines on the registration of pharmaceutical products and suspend using the stringent Asean guidelines that have made it extremely difficult for drug manufacturers to register their products in the Philippines.

Meanwhile, Herrera called on the FDA and Department of Health to strengthen the capacity of local drug manufacturers to address the pharmaceutical needs of the public, especially in times of national health emergencies.

She said the FDA’s establishment of Covid-19 protocols would be for naught if the recommended drugs are not going to be made available to the public.

She added that in times of national health emergencies, such as the one the country is currently having with the pandemic, it is crucial that government agencies provide the citizens with all the resources they will need.

She noted that this becomes more apparent as first-world nations have become top priorities of pharmaceutical industries, leaving third-world nations in the dark in terms of availability of potentially life-saving drugs.

“We have to look into our own resources because we have to be self-sufficient,” she said. “The number one responsibility is to look into our very own resources and to make use of those.”*PNA

ARCHIVES

Read Article by date

April 2024
MTWTFSS
1234567
891011121314
15161718192021
22232425262728
2930 

Get your copy of the Visayan Daily Star everyday!

Avail of the FREE 30-day trial.