Over the past five years, pharmaceutical companies in the West have seized India as a testing ground for drugs.
Over the past five years, pharmaceutical companies in the West have seized India as a testing ground for drugs. According to the Independent, after the relaxation of restrictions on drug trials in 2005, this business has swollen to such a point in India today that over 150,000 people are involved in at least 1,600 clinical trials, which are conducted on behalf of British, American and European firms including AstraZeneca, Pfizer, and Merck.
Between 2007 and 2010, nearly 1,730 people died in India while, or after, participating in such trials, which according to the paper, may be worth as much as 189 million pounds.
Various incidents of such drug trials were carried out in the states of Madhya Pradesh, Andhra Pradesh, as well as in Delhi, the paper said.
The trials involved the recruitment of hundreds of tribal girls without parental consent for an immunisation study that was sponsored by the Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation.
It involved the use of survivors of the poisonous gas disaster in Bhopal as "guinea pigs" in at least 11 trials by drug companies without proper informed consent.
Also, a police investigation in Indore found that dozens of private trials by doctors at a government hospital in the city 'violated the ethical guidelines'. The doctors who conducted the trials decided that not one of 81 cases in which a participant suffered an adverse effect was linked to the treatment.
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Added to this, almost all doctors speak some English. The infrastructure for such trials, often in the form of government hospitals, is widely available.
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Source-ANI