Murder by Proxy: The Story of Fake Artesunate
Saw James felt unwell, with sudden onset of high fevers and shivering, despite the tropical heat of eastern Burma. By the time he reached the nearest clinic, a days walk away, his friend was half-dragging him.
By: Sai Awn Murng
Saw James was barely conscious, mumbling incoherently,
his eyes semi-shut. Medics immediately diagnosed him with a common, deadly
complication of malaria: cerebral malaria. Saw James was quickly given
artesunate, the only medication to reliably treat malaria along the Thai-Burma
border. Two days later, he felt weak but was awake and without
fever. Saw James was lucky and would survive, this time.
Like other
social services in the country, Burma’s
health system has collapsed, another consequence of military
misgovernance. The current regime, the State Peace and Development
Council (SPDC), devotes 40 cents per person per year on health, amongst the
lowest in the world; neighboring Thailand’s equivalent is $61.
Concurrently, erratic policies, including purchases of military hardware and a
nuclear reactor, in addition to relocating to the new capital of Naypyidaw,
estimated by the International Monetary Fund (IMF) to cost 122-244 million
dollars per year, continue to divert scarce resources away from essential
social services. Notes The Gathering Storm, a report published in
July 2007 by the Johns Hopkins University
and University of California, Berkeley,
“Decades of neglect by Burma’s
military government have turned the country into an incubator of infectious
diseases.” Malaria, particularly the most dangerous type, Plasmodium
falciparum, is a top cause of sickness and death, and Burma accounted for over half of Asia’s deaths
from malaria in 2005, including India,
with her vastly larger population. 70% of the peoples of Burma live in
malaria-endemic areas, especially along the frontiers of the country,
overwhelmingly populated by non-Burman ethnic groups and where lack of health
services and poverty is especially pronounced. According to Chronic
Emergency, a report published by the Backpack Health Worker Team, working
in eastern Burma,
malaria was the cause of almost half of all deaths and, at any point in time,
over 12% in the community had Plasmodium falciparum malaria.
The problem is now compounded by the widespread availability of fake drugs,
including artesunate, the mainstay of malaria treatment in the region, a
practice which has been appropriately termed “murder by proxy.” In one
analysis, over a fifth of artesunate obtained in Burma were fake, a problem that has
continued to grow. For the first time, two different batches of
artesunate purchased in Kengtung, the capital of eastern Shan State, have been
confirmed by the Division of Parasitic Disease of the United States Centers for
Disease Control and Prevention, tasked with testing for malaria drug quality,
to be fake. The report of the analysis performed in January, 2008, noted,
“They [the pills] contained no measurable amounts of the active ingredient,
artesunate. The tablets weighed much more than the comparable genuine Guilin [Pharmaceutical]
tablets… [and were] much harder to manually split in two.” Concluded the
report, “these samples are definite fakes. It is almost impossible to
distinguish fakes from genuine based on package appearance.”
Lack of
governmental regulatory control and widespread corruption contribute to the
burgeoning black market trade, including in pharmaceutical products, both
authentic and fake. “There is no control of medicines… pharmacy shops sell them but sometimes even
betel nut stalls sell medicines,” noted a Burmese physician, previously working
in Mon State and Tavoy. “There is a lot of indiscriminate use.”
The problem is exacerbated by worsening poverty and runaway inflation,
estimated to run over 35% per year, the worst in Asia, which have made
healthcare, paid for almost entirely out-of-pocket, an unaffordable luxury for
many of the peoples of Burma,
especially given that 70% of the average Burmese household income is spent on
food alone. The result is the growing, unwitting, demand for fake drugs,
sold more cheaply than the genuine product and packaged almost identically,
compounding the health tragedy that continues to unfold in the
country.

Malaria risk areas in Burma. Source: World Health Organization, Regional Office for South-east Asia.


