How Serialization can Improve Drug Manufacturing Operations
Zusammenfassung
An estimated 10% of the global
medicine supply chain is counterfeit with sales of
counterfeit prescription drugs estimated to be
around $75 billion a year. Although estimates
about the magnitude of the global counterfeiting
problem vary, it is widely recognized that the
number of fake drugs being made is growing
annually as criminals are increasingly attracted by
the high returns and low risks that such activities
represent. In 2013, the United States passed the
Drug Supply Chain Security Act (DSCSA) requiring
Serialization as part of an effort to protect patients
from exposure to unsafe drugs that may be
counterfeit, stolen, or contaminated. The new law
required all prescribed pharmaceutical drug
products sold in the U.S. be tracked and identified
in every package with a unique identifier that
includes essential product information. Although
serialization is a compliance requirement,
Pharmaceutical companies have embraced the
challenge and have taken advantage of the
opportunity to automate steps and improve
manufacturing operations.
Key Terms - Counterfeiting, Improvement,
Serialization, Track and Trace.