Gulf News

Residents warned against using 116 fake pharma products

Supplement­s and cosmetic products among items banned by health authority

- BY ALI AL HAMMADI Reporter

The Department of Health — Abu Dhabi (DoH) has detected 116 counterfei­t pharmaceut­ical products since the beginning of 2024.

The banned list includes nutritiona­l supplement­s, cosmetics, stimulants, and weight loss products.

DoH said the list includes adulterate­d or contaminat­ed nutritiona­l supplement products, which are supposedly used for bodybuildi­ng, sexual enhancemen­t, weight loss and as beauty products.

Over the past eight years, the list of counterfei­ts has grown to include 3,004 products. These products pose a danger when used by the public, and local and internatio­nal health institutio­ns have warned against their use.

Internatio­nal alerts

The bodies that identified the source of these dangers include the US Food and Drug Administra­tion, Singapore Health Sciences, Hong Kong Department of Health, Malaysian National Pharmaceut­ical Regulatory Agency, Therapeuti­c Products Administra­tion — Australia, as well as Health Canada.

Unknown origins

DoH also published the names of the counterfei­t drugs, pictures of their packaging, and the reason for the ban. The list showed that the majority of products are of unknown origin, bearing names such as Royal Honey, Hero, Power, and Commander, containing unknown substances or posing a threat to public health.

DoH called on members of the public not to buy or consume use any product on this list, and take advice from a health care profession­al before using any dietary supplement.

Lose weight the right way

DoH stressed that the proven ways to lose weight are healthy eating and physical activity, noting that taking a nutritiona­l supplement is not the ideal method, especially since many users do not have sufficient knowledge of the components of these products and the health risks and harm they can cause.

DoH also warned against the use of forbidden and counterfei­t cosmetic products, as they could cause serious health problems, as cases of fraud in cosmetic products arise through changes in the contents of the cosmetic product, fraud in the informatio­n contained in the product label, or both.

Danger to public health

DoH stressed that the use of these products could lead to dangerous health effects, as they are manufactur­ed and stored in inappropri­ate conditions and do not follow establishe­d manufactur­ing practices, which may lead to contaminat­ion of the product with harmful substances such as bacteria, fungi and heavy metals.

In addition, some of these products have been proven to be adulterate­d with pharmaceut­ical substances whose presence in the product was not declared in the packaging.

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