Recalled drugs still on pharmacy shelves in UAE
Pharmacists said while they were aware of recalls elsewhere, they had received
no order from UAE health authorities to remove the drugs from the shelves.
Dubai
In the absence of a Ministry of Health ban, UAE pharmacists continue to stock
some of the over-the-counter drugs that have been recalled in 12 countries after
consultations with the US Food and Drug Administration (FDA).
More
than 40 over-the-counter infant and children's medications were recalled in the
US and 11 other countries on Saturday because they did not meet quality
standards.
The
Ministry of Health has not issued a statement and health officials were not
available for comment on Sunday.
Pharmacists said while they were aware of recalls elsewhere, they had received
no order from UAE health authorities to remove the drugs from the shelves.
Pharmacists who spoke to Gulf News said they only stocked Tylenol and
Zyrtec for children, and not others that had been recalled in parts of the
world.
Other
drugs that have been recalled are variations of infant versions of Tylenol Plus,
Motrin and Benadryl.
The
recall was issued by McNeil Consumer Healthcare with the US Food and Drug
Administration.
Alternatives
The
company has advised consumers to stop giving the products to their children as a
precautionary measure.
Doctors in Dubai have, meanwhile, said wary parents could give their children
effective alternatives to Tylenol.
Al
Safa Medical Centre endocrinologist Dr Abdul Mohsin Al Sayed said that Tylenol
"is exactly the same as Adol and Panadol, it's just a Paracetamol".
"Tylenol was recalled a few years ago as well, and I've stopped prescribing it
since then," he said.
"Paracetamol
is all the same medication so it doesn't matter which brand you use. We don't
even stock [Tylenol] in our pharmacy."
Umm
Suqeim Medical Centre general practitioner Dr Badr Sultan Al Muhairi said
Tylenol had only been recalled as a precaution.
"We've never prescribed or stocked it in government hospitals and pharmacies; it
is usually prescribed in the private medical centres," he said.
"The
treatment of Tylenol is the same as Adol, which we prescribe; the difference may
be in the concentration of the drug."
Medcare Hospital Internal Medicine Specialist Dr Mazen Riadh said, to be on the safe side, parents should buy the regular Paracetamol "with nothing extra [in it]"