FMD has reduced manufacturing capacity by 10%, says BGMA
The falsified medicines directive (FMD) has reduced manufacturing capacity by 10%, British Generics Manufacturers Association (BGMA) director general Warwick Smith has claimed.
Mr Smith expressed his disapproval of the anti-counterfeit medicines legislation during the annual Sigma conference in Cebu in the Philippines yesterday (February 17).
The FMD drugs packaging requirements, which require medicine packs to be printed with 2D barcodes, have “essentially reduced manufacturing capacity by 10%“, Mr Smith claimed.
The BGMA arrived at the 10% figure based on feedback from the organisation's members and from the wider industry, Mr Smith told C+D today (February 18).
The fact that companies must now “affix a unique identifier and also an anti-tamper device for each pack” has slowed manufacturing lines, Mr Smith added.
In the context of ongoing medicines shortages, the capacity reduction means there is “less wiggle room” for manufacturers, compounding other factors that have caused the supply chain to weaken, he added
FMD is an EU medicines scanning law that came into force last February, with the aim of preventing counterfeit medicines from entering the drugs supply chain.
Shortages “outside of our control”
Mr Smith’s also discussed medicines shortages and the complex reasons they occur.
One cause of shortages given by Mr Smith was changes to the environmental legislation in China that has seen factories move from urban to rural locations. Factors like these are, he said, “outside of our control”.
Of the range of issues that have led to shortages most are “due to government policies rather than anything that is being done in the distribution chain”, Mr Smith claimed.
A C+D investigation last month revealed that the Department of Health and Social Care recorded 178 medicine shortages in England from January-November 2019.
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What is your take FMD and its impact?