Category: Health and Environment

  • NAFDAC Announces Strategic Plans to Boost Quality of Nigerian Herbal Medicines for Global Market Acceptance

    NAFDAC Announces Strategic Plans to Boost Quality of Nigerian Herbal Medicines for Global Market Acceptance

     

    By Biola Lawal
    Abuja (Flowerbudnews): The Director General of the National Agency for Food and Drug Administration and Control (NAFDAC) has announced strategic plans to boost the quality of Nigerian Herbal medicines to make them acceptable on the international market.

    Prof Mojisola Adeyeye made the announcement  on Friday in her message to commemorate the 2023 International Traditional Medicine Day which is celebrated on the 31st of August of every year.

    This was disclosed in a statement by NAFDAC Resident Media Consultant,  Sayo Akintola, a copy of which was made available to Flowerbudnews on Sunday.

    The NAFDAC Boss stressed that the strategic plans mapped out by the Agency included nationwide assessment inspection visit to the production facilities of the 614 herbal medicine producers across the country.

    She noted the inspection would enable NAFDAC counsel and instruct on necessary steps to  enhance and standardise herbal medicine practice to a greater height where products would be globally acceptable and competitive in the international market.

    Prof Adeyeye commended the efforts of herbal medicines manufacturers across the country for their resilience, noted with a sense of pride the foray of several herbal formulations at the clinical trial preparatory to getting approval for NAFDAC registration number.

    ” The Guidelines for the Good Manufacturing Practice in herbal medicine production has been prepared by the Agency”, she said, adding that the Agency is working on a series of training for the practitioners to get them accustomed to the guidelines.

    According to her, officers of the Agency would thereafter commence vigorous inspections of facilities to ascertain the level of preparedness of the herbal practitioners in the business after the training.

    Based on the training they will receive, she said ”we will be able to make sure that they follow the guidelines to the letter”, stressing that the Agency would pass down the knowledge of the guidelines to the over 614 herbal medicines facilities in Nigeria.

    The DG explained that the facilities have been divided into zones, with the Agency staff across the federation to be deployed for the exercise. In the Southwest, our staff in Lagos, Ibadan, and Ogun will be deployed for the exercise.

    Likewise, people in the North, Southsouth and other zones”, she said, noting that deploying NAFDAC staff in each zone for the job would reduce the cost on the Agency.

    Prof Adeyeye disclosed that the stakeholder’s training will start with Lagos which has over 317 facilities, noting that we cant enforce the rules when we have not taught them what to do”.

    She said after the training the herbal practitioners would be given about a month or two to get themselves ready before the Agency’s staff visit them for inspection,.adding that anyone who is not functioning well will either have his facility shut or placed on hold.

    ” In herbal production, the level of hygiene is not so high. We have been telling those facilities that we visited that they needed to do something about their filling”.

    She identifies capsule filling as one aspect of their operations that has posed a big challenge. Admitting that sometimes the herbal medicines are in capsules or syrup, she said, they dont have an automated filling machine for capsules.

    She noted that the manual method is not safe, warning that after December, the Agency would not register any company without the semi-automated or automated capsule filling machines.

    Prof. Adeyeye stressed that a lot of people are using herbal. ” The earlier we raise our standard the better for us”.

    She disclosed that the University of Lagos is trying to establish a manufacturing facility so that all the herbal practitioners who dont have funds can go there and use the facility for production at a token.

    Giving an insight into the GMP guidelines, Prof Adeyeye said It will help the practitioners to know how to run their manufacturing plant, adding that the guideline talks about personnel, qualifications of the personnel amongst others.

    ” Herbal manufacturing GMP requires that the personnel be qualified, and the building be constructed to specific standards.

    The floor, walls, and roof must be clean, smooth, and impervious to moisture. All these are required to make contamination impossible.”

    Prof Adeyeye said that the guidelines emphasized the need for hygiene, adding that the guidelines also talk about the premises. How the premises should be, insisting that “we want a building that will make contamination impossible”.

    She said the inspectors from the Agency would be concerned about how the equipment is placed to avoid cross-contamination because in manufacturing, personnel are the greatest agents of contamination to products.

    ”The machines should be well placed to allow free flow of movement of staff. It also talks about the Stores, where the raw materials are kept in such a way that contamination should be avoided.

    ”The production flow and the finished products. We will find out how they source and store their raw materials and finished products’’.

    The NAFDAC boss, however, expressed delight that three herbal product manufacturers are being awaited to conclude the clinical trial.

    She disclosed that the three products piloted phases one and two, adding that they are still being awaited to come back and validate their claims with a larger population sample size.

    ”We encourage the practitioners to present the pilot study results and we will evaluate and if satisfactory, they can move on to the larger study and later grant approval for full registration”, she said.

    Prof Adeyeye stressed that people reacted differently to different drugs, hence the need for a larger number of samples for the study in the larger phase 3 study of the clinical trial. (Flowerbudnews)

  • NAFDAC Consolidates Efforts to end Rejection of Nigerian Food Exports, Solicits Cooperation of Freight Forwarders, Others

    NAFDAC Consolidates Efforts to end Rejection of Nigerian Food Exports, Solicits Cooperation of Freight Forwarders, Others

     

    By Biola Lawal

    Lagos (Flowerbudnews):  National Agency for Food and Drug Administration and Control (NAFDAC) has intensified efforts to end rejection of Nigerian food exports by strengthening collaboration with freight forwarders, Clearing Agents and Freight Consolidators at the ports.

    A NAFDAC statement by Sayo Akintola, the Resident Consultant, disclosed that the Agency had successfully held discussions with critical trade groups at the ports under the theme: The role of Freight Consolidator in the Export of NAFDAC Regulated Products at the Murtala Mohammed International Airport, Ikeja, Lagos,

    The parley brought together all the major stakeholders in the ports trade at the nations ports to align with the appropriate electronic channel to obtain NAFDAC export certification.

    NAFDAC DG, Prof Mojisola Adeyeye emphasised the need for collaboration of the various trade groups in the export business to put an end to rejection of food exports from Nigeria in Europe and the U.S.

    Speaking at the stakeholder meeting Prof Adeyeye implored the clearing agents to propagate to the various exporters, cargo operators and handlers, the need to align with NAFDAC guidelines and its appropriate regulatory channels for export certification.

    This She noted, would assist the efforts to stop to the embarrassment that rejection of food exports from Nigeria more often than not, brought to the country and the huge losses incurred by the exporters.

    She noted that NAFDAC efforts were in line with the Federal Government policy on diversifying the economy through the non-oil export sector and with the policy initiative on the Presidential Enabling Business Executive Council (PEBEC),

    Prof Adeyeye pointed out that NAFDAC was one of the key drivers of the noble initiative had stepped up its processes and procedures towards ensuring that all NAFDAC Regulated Products meant for Export meet the required standard acceptable at national and international markets especially with the specifications of buying country

    She disclosed that this was now being done through an improved process of Documentation, Laboratory analysis, Inspection, Registration and Certification before products are exported.

    The meeting with freight forwarders, freight consolidators, and clearing agents Freight Consolidators in export business was a follow-up to the one the Agency had with Pre-shipment Agents about a month ago.

    The Director General,  who was represented by the Head, Export Division, Ports Inspection Directorate of NAFDAC, Mrs. Oluwaseyi Sanwo-olu, called on the export stakeholders of the Agency regulated products for effective collaboration with the regulatory authority to complement its robust regulatory policies geared toward understanding the NAFDAC export processes.

    The main objective was collaboration to safeguard a unified exportation procedure and zero rejects of Nigeria export products.

    NAFDAC as a Governmental Agency was established by its Enabling Act Cap N1 Laws of the Federation of Nigeria (LFN) 2004 which empowers the Agency as the competent authority in Nigeria, charged with the responsibility of regulating and controlling the manufacture, importation, exportation, distribution, advertisement, sale, and use of food, drug, chemicals, and other regulated products.

    Prof Adeyeye noted that the regulatory policy of the agency was geared towards the protection of consumers and promoting public health, by ensuring that regulated products were of good quality, safe, efficacious, wholesome, and accepted in the global market.

    ”We recognize and appreciate the role of each of the Export Facilitation Stakeholders namely: (Consolidators, freight forwarders, clearing agents, members of the Association of Nigeria Customs Licensed Agents, National Association of Government Approved Freight Forwarders (NAGAFF),Association of Nigeria licensed custom Agent (ANCLA),” She stated.

    The National Association of Freight Forwarders and Air Consolidators (NAFFAC) etc.) here represented today as main actors in the export chain, she said, stressing that it is their obligation to sensitize and enlighten the exporters on NAFDAC processes and procedures as well.

    She pointed out that by coming together, the Agency and port operators will help make the trade of the non-oil sector be better, more robust, and more consultative.

    According to the NAFDAC boss, the following are the Agencys expectations from Consolidators of its regulated products.
    Freight Consolidators should be well informed on the nature of the products they are handling and how to keep the products integrity intact.
    Guide their clients (exporters) to always factor in, time for processing of export certification in their timeline before planning the next exportation.

    Comply with documentation requirements for NAFDAC regulated products before shipment.
    Have a requisite understanding of quality, safety and standards of regulated product or consignment they are handling.

    A good understanding of proper handling, use of approved packaging material, group-packaging of like products.

    Understand the implication of forwarding and exporting products without recourse to NAFDAC processes and procedures.

    She said they must always avoid cross-contamination of products (e.g., food products, cosmetics, chemicals), adding that cool temperature that does not allow microbes to grow must be maintained.

    Prof Adeyeye urged them to use quality finished and raw material, adding that they should also ensure that personnel handling processes are medically fit to avoid contamination.

    She added that NAFDACs door is opened to trade, we encourage and support trade, adding that the NAFDAC Export certification channel is Customer friendly, easy to operate and timely.
    According to her, the Agencys leverage is on the commitment to achieve zero export reject.

    She said the Agency is sensitive to the peculiarity of export consignment at the MMIA and is willing to guide the erring exporters as well as streamline export requirements for such consignments hence the reason for relocating the Export Division of PID in NAFDAC to the newly built NAFDACs NAHCO at MMIA for easy accessibility to exporters of such consignments.

    Prof Adeyeye noted that the Agency acknowledges the importance of having broader and deeper Interactions and collaborations with sister agencies such as Standards Organization of Nigeria (SON), Nigeria Agricultural Quarantine Service (NAQS), Nigeria Export Promotion Council (NEPC), Nigeria Custom Service (NCS) etc.

    It is worth noting that all exported products that went through NAFDAC export certification process have never been rejected, she said. (Flowerbudnews)

  • Tinubu sacks Gwandu as CEO NASENI, appoints Halilu

    Tinubu sacks Gwandu as CEO NASENI, appoints Halilu

    President Bola Tinubu has terminated the appointment of Dr. Bashir Gwandu as the Executive Vice Chairman/Chief Executive Officer, of the National Agency for Science and Engineering Infrastructure, NASENI.

    President Tinubu also approved the appointment of Khalil Suleiman Halilu as the new Executive Vice Chairman and Chief Executive Officer of the National Agency for Science and Engineering Infrastructure (NASENI).

    This was contained in a statement issued by the Special Adviser to the President on Media and Publicity, Chief Ajuri Ngelale in Abuja on Friday.

     

    According to the statement, “By this appointment, Khalil Suleiman Halilu will serve for an initial term of five years in accordance with the relevant sections of the NASENI Act, 2014.

     

    “Mr. Halilu, 32, is expected to bring his significant experience as an innovator and technology expert to bear in this important new national assignment.

     

    “The tenure of Dr. Bashir Gwandu as EVC/CEO of NASENI is hereby terminated.

     

    “By the directive of the President, this appointment takes immediate effect

  • UCH doctors protest assault on colleague

    UCH doctors protest assault on colleague

    Health care services at the University College Hospital, Ibadan on Thursday were again disrupted when doctors under the aegis of the Association of Resident Doctors (ARD), at the hospital, staged a peaceful protest to register their displeasure over the assault on a female doctor.

    The protesters, who moved through different outpatient clinics and service points at the hospital, had placards with different inscriptions like: “Doctors are not punching bags, stop beating those who take care of you,” “Let UCH doctors breathe,” “We save lives; do not take our lives,” and “Do not kill us at our place of work.”

     

    They were also chanting messages like “don’t attack, nurses, doctors or other health workers, we are only working to save lives” and “we say no to assault or violence on any health worker in UCH.”

     

    They said a female doctor was assaulted at the department of radiology of the hospital on August 29, 2023 while she was at her duty post performing her clinical duties.

     

    She was said to have been severally slapped on the face by a patient’s relative in reaction to the problem of electricity power failure in the hospital, making it impossible to do the CT scan he required for his patient.

     

    President of ARD, University College Hospital, Ibadan, Dr Abiodun Ogundipe, speaking on the doctors’ protest, said it is a despicable act for health workers in the course of saving lives to be assaulted by patient’s relatives, particularly with the emigration of health workers and few health workers in government hospitals to attend to patients.

     

    Ogundipe, while saying no assault of doctors and other healthcare workers in the hospital, said the protest was to create attention to the public that any assault or violence against health workers at the hospital will no longer be tolerated.

     

    “We are emphasizing and saying No to any assault on our colleagues and other healthcare workers in UCH, Ibadan. More than 5 doctors were attacked within two years within the hospital premises and we don’t want to condone this again.

    It is not until they kill us before we will speak. That is why we have raised our voices against this action.”

    The entire public needs to know that the association and hospital have a zero tolerance for assault and violence against medical doctors and other healthcare workers.”

     

    “Anyone who engages is such nefarious acts would be arrested and made to face the full wrath of the law.”

     

    The Chief Medical Director of the hospital, CMD, Professor Jesse Otegbayo, in a reaction, said the assailant has been immediately handed over to the police force for prosecution because the hospital views it as inhumane, unwarranted, and unacceptable.

     

    Professor Otegbayo said members of the public are to exercise some level of decorum while accessing medical care in the hospital and patients and their relatives not satisfied with services received at any service point should channel their complaints and grievances through the SERVICOM officers for appropriate investigation and redress

     

    He, however, said that the hospital had written a letter of compassion to apologize to the affected doctor, and the assailant on bail with 3 sureties and N100,000 from Yemetu police station in Ibadan is to be charged to the court to face the wrath of the law.

  • FG to shut down Murtala Muhammed Airport, suspends contracts, concessions

    FG to shut down Murtala Muhammed Airport, suspends contracts, concessions

    The Minister of Aviation and Aerospace Development, Festus Keyamo, has directed all international airlines to vacate the Murtala Muhammed International Airport, MMIA, from October 1, 2023.

    This became necessary, according to him, to give room for total maintenance work at the airport.

    The minister disclosed this during a tour at the international airport in Lagos, where he was accompanied by the Federal Airport Authority of Nigeria, FAAN, Mr. Kabir Yusuf Mohammed.

     

    The minister, while speaking at the sideline of the airport tour, directed the airlines and companies operating in the airport to move to the new terminal – MMIA Terminal 2.

     

    Keyamo also suspended all contracts, projects, concessions in the sector until further notice.

     

    He said: “All airlines should vacate the MMIA before October 1 and relocate to MMIA Terminal 2.”

  • Breaking: NAFDAC Listing Approval for AAU’s GLUCOZIL, herbal medicine for Diabetes Has Expired  -DG

    Breaking: NAFDAC Listing Approval for AAU’s GLUCOZIL, herbal medicine for Diabetes Has Expired -DG

    Flowerbudnews

     

    By Biola Lawal

    Abuja” (Flowerbudnews): The National Agency for Food and Drug Administration and Control ( NAFDAC), has clarified that the Agency’s label and listing approval granted for GLUCOZIL, herbal medicine for diabetes expired since November 2022.

    NAFDAC Director-General, Prof. Moji Adeyeye made the clarification in a press briefing statement entitled: Re-NAFFDAC approves GLUCOZIL, AAU’s herbal medicine for diabetes made available to newsmen on Tuesday.

    Flowerbudnews recall that Authorities of Ambrose Ali University, Ekpoma had on August 24, issued a public statement claiming total clearance and approval of its herbal diabetes medicine-  GLUCOZIL for use by patients.

    However, NAFDAC Boss, Prof Adeyeye

    states that:

    The Agencys (NAFDAC) attention has been drawn to a publication on August 24th, 2023, circulating in many print and online media which claims that a Listed Local Herbal Medicine Glucozil produced by Ambrose Alli University Ekpoma was approved by NAFDAC for the treatment and cure of Diabetes Mellitus and capable of treating Benign prostatic hyperplasia (Prostrate enlargement) together with some anti-inflammatory properties.

    In the said publication, Glucozil was claimed to have been scientifically tested with safety established in both humans and animals.

    The Agency wishes to clarify that:
    The Agency Listed Glucozil Capsule on the 10th of November 2020 for the MANAGEMENT OF HIGH BLOOD SUGAR (as captured on the approved label and Listing Certificate issued to the applicant) which was valid till 9th November 2022.

    Therefore the herbal medicine certificate has expired.

    As specified in the Herbal Medicine & Related Products Labelling Regulations 2021, this listing was subject to the inclusion of the mandatory Disclaimer These claims have not been evaluated by NAFDAC on the product label.

    This is the regular disclaimer that is used and required for other listed herbal products which have not undergone Clinical Trials that the Agency deemed satisfactory.

    Treatment, Curative and Preventive Claims for Diabetes, Benign prostatic hyperplasia and detoxification were never approved for Glucozil as claimed in the publication and hence should be disregarded by the public.

    K

    From our records, Ambrose Alli University was neither the manufacturer nor the applicant of the said product for which the Listing is no longer valid.

    The University should have verified the status of the herbal medicine certificate and the approved claim.

    Manufacturing, Distribution or Marketing of this product is not allowed until the renewal application has been submitted and approved by the Agency.

    The importance of verifying information from credible sources before disseminating cannot be overstated. Misleading reporting can misinform those seeking medical treatment thereby jeopardizing their health.

    NAFDAC’s commitment to ensuring public health and safety through stringent regulatory oversight remains steadfast.

    It is crucial to exercise caution when interpreting health-related claims therefore we encourage the public to refer to NAFDAC’s official communications channels for accurate updates and information. (Flowerbudnews)