Monday, January 2, 2012

12 MP doctors let off with Rs.5,000 fine for conducting illegal drug trials

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<-- Drug Trial Victim " Yatharth".

As penalties for subjecting patients to guinea pig treatment go, this one would not even register on the blip screen. 

A dozen government doctors in Indore got a mere slap on the wrist on Saturday evening when they were fined Rs.5,000 for allegedly conducting controversial drug trials on 1,883 poor and unsuspecting hospital inmates, many of whom suffered from side effects and some even lost their lives. 

The trials, that took place over a period of four years in three hospitals, shockingly did not either have the government's permission or the patients' informed consent. What was worse, the accused appeared to have covered their tracks by not furnishing the details of the drugs or vaccines used in the experiments as also the names and particulars of the victims. In these circumstances, assessing the precise extent of damage in terms of side effects and fatalities was an onerous task. 

Instead of looking at the criminal conduct of errant doctors belonging to government hospitals of Indore, the probe conducted by the city's chief medical and health officer (CMHO), Dr Sharad Pandit, merely invoked the Madhya Pradesh Nursing Homes and Clinical Establishment (registration and licence) Amendment Act, 2003, to impose the paltry penalty. The Madhya Pradesh government's disdain for the victims was further laid bare by the untouched provision of the same law that provides for a maximum fine of Rs.50,000. 

Even that amount, however, would not have been a serious deterrent for the doctors who, according to Paras Sacklecha (an Independent legislator from Ratlam), had pocketed Rs.1.44 crore from private pharmaceutical companies to conduct the trials. "They lured poor and illiterate patients without telling them about the implications involved," Sacklecha alleged. It was he who obtained the figure of 1,883 victims, including children and mentally challenged persons, from the government under the RTI Act. 

"In fact, without taking permission for the drug trial from the government, the doctors have not only taken the huge sum from pharma majors but also embarked on foreign tours," Sacklecha added. The penalty, interestingly, was imposed on the doctors for not furnishing the details of the victims who had been subjected to the trials. 

"A fine of Rs.5,000 each has been imposed on 12 doctors of autonomous medical colleges and hospitals attached with them for conducting drug trials on children and mentally challenged persons. The doctors had expressed their inability to provide details of drug or vaccine trial, citing a provision of the Drug and Cosmetics Rules, 1945," medical education department deputy secretary Shyam Singh Kumre said. 

In effect, therefore, action had been taken only for their failing to provide data to the CMHO under the nursing homes Act. Even the press note was silent on the illegality of the doctors' action. It merely talked about new norms: "The state government is serious about the complaints received in this connection and fresh guidelines will be issued after chalking out new parameters."

But Dr Anand Rai, the whistleblower and a government doctor of Dhar district, said: "A maximum fine of Rs.50,000 could be imposed if the nursing homes were not registered or were unable to furnish monthly data. Yet the fine slapped on the doctors was the bare minimum." 

Rai felt the government had simply let off the doctors despite their performing drug trials on patients who had gone to the government hospitals for routine treatment. "Putting such patients under clinical drug trials without taking their consent is a criminal offence," he added.
Between 2006 and 2010, the paediatrics department of MGM Medical College, Chacha Nehru Bal Chikitsalay Avum Anusandhan Kendra, and the department of medicines and neurology of M. Y. Hospital - all Indore- based - allegedly conducted thousands of clinical trials on children, men and women. 

The MP government looked the other way till the issue rocked the state assembly in the last monsoon session, forcing chief minister Shivraj Singh Chouhan to order an enquiry by the Economic Offences Wing. The latter curiously did not come out with the names of the culprit doctors, the beneficiary corporations or even the victims. However, last month, Chouhan claimed that no patient had died during the drug trials in Indore. 

"The state bureau of investigation of economic offences has submitted a chart, along with its report on unethical drug trials, on important facts and statistical data. This chart shows that 81 people had died or fell unwell after the trials. But it has not come to our notice that anyone died directly as a result of the drug trials," the CM told the House, leaving enough room for doubt about whether the home ministry was proficient enough to probe the cause of deaths after the trials. 

Recently, the National Human Rights Commission (NHRC) served a notice to the MP government over reports alleging illegal drug trials on mentally ill patients in Indore. The NHRC asked the state chief secretary to submit a report within four weeks, referring to a media report alleging that 233 mentally ill patients were subjected to drug trials in Indore. 

The NHRC wanted to know whether guidelines of the Indian Council of Medical Research (ICMR) were adhered to by doctors while taking approval for the trials from independent ethics committees attached to private hospitals. It also sought information on whether the nature of the drugs being tested had been revealed. Furthermore, the panel asked whether any survey had been conducted about the status of health of the mentally ill patients who underwent drug trials. 

"Every medicine has some side effects or risks associated with its use. It is very difficult to say what kind of side effects the patients on whom the drugs were tested may have suffered. The most shocking part of the entire Indore drug trial fiasco is that the doctors conducted investigational vaccination trials on illiterate persons without telling them about the implications involved," Dr Anand Rai said.

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