Popular Articles

RCom Q3 net falls 19% to Rs 1,165 cr
Anil Ambani Group company Reliance Communications today said its consolidated net profit declined by 19.34 per cent to Rs 1,164.82 crore for the third quarter of 2009-10.

Shell transferring thousands of jobs to India, Phillipines
In order to reduce costs, global oil major Shell will soon transfer additional office jobs from Houston and elsewhere to India and the Philippines.

News of the day

FDI up 56% as India beats recession blues
India is back on the radar of global investors even in the midst of the global financial crisis, with 56 per cent year-on-year rise in inflows of foreign direct investment in July this year, an official said.
International Business

Drug makers vie to supply antidote

Large and small Indian drug manufacturers are flocking the offices of various state governments to secure manufacturing licences to supply cheap versions of Tamiflu (oseltamivir), the drug to treat the fast spreading swine flu, anticipating huge demand for the drug in the coming weeks. - Five more swine flu deaths in Pune; countrywide toll 23 - Allow retail sale of drug, say domestic pharma players - 60% drop in Pune mall footfalls - Mumbai malls, stores see biz dropping up to 50 per cent - Bangalore reports first death, toll rises to 20 - Suspected swine flu case in Bihar The government, which procured 10 million doses of the drug earlier, plans to procure another 20 million doses in the coming weeks. The rush for licences is to cash in on this huge opportunity, said sources. “Oseltamivir lacks patent protection in India and is included in the Indian Pharmacopeia, which means state drug controllers can licence it, as it is a known drug,” Surinder Singh, Drug Controller General of India (DCGI) told Business Standard. In the case of new drugs, it is mandatory to get clearance from the DCGI to get a manufacturing licence, according to the Drugs and Cosmetics Act. DCGI said his office, the Central Drug Standard Control Organisation (CDSCO), was not aware of how many manufacturers had approached the various state drug controllers to secure a licence for the drug. Sources said six companies are known to have manufacturing licences for generic Tamiflu, including innovator Roche Scientific Company. The others being Cipla, Hetero Drugs, Natco Pharma, Ranbaxy Laboratories and Bangalore-based Hetero Drugs. Besides, several other companies, including small and medium level manufacturers, have approached the state drug controllers, they said. The share prices of all the four companies which are listed rose today — Ranbaxy (0.02 per cent), Cipla (3.17 per cent), Strides Arcolab (4.44 per cent) and Natco Pharma(2.84 per cent) on the Bombay Stock Exchange (BSE), when the benchmark Sensex fell 150 points. Meanwhile, the Centre has reiterated its earlier stand of controlled sale of Tamiflu. Addressing a press conference in New Delhi today, Health and Family Welfare minister Ghulam Nabi Azad said the control on sale of the drug would continue and there was no proposal to permit retail sale.


Add your comment:
Name:
Site address: http://
Your message:
Enter today\\\\'s date, 2 digits
(spam protection):