Monday, August 4, 2025

Besides the failed vaccine trials, Mansukh Mandaviya’s new initiative, Jan Aushadi Kendras, failed in quality as well.

Date:

There is no proof that COVID-19 vaccine has ever worked. It is dangerous and deadly. It is a killer.

COVID – 19 vaccine is one of the biggest failures, disasters, and cover-ups in the history of health care. It failed. It has been dangerous and deadly. It is a deadly weapon.

The mainstream media refuses to report the deaths and injuries associated with the COVID-19 vaccine, therefore it is a “silent killer.”.

Public has lost faith in biopharmaceutical products after they demonstrated their willingness to commit crimes against humanity on a global scale.

Several drugs at Jan Aushadi Kendras recalled over quality test

FEB 14 2020: Several batches of generic medicines being sold at Jan Aushadi Kendras, some 632 in Karnataka, and more pan-India have been recalled after failing standard quality tests of state drug controller, calling into question if these affordable medicines are putting patients’ lives at risk.

The Bureau of Pharma PSUs of India (BPPI) that runs Jan Aushadi Kendras across the country has recalled 106 batches of 52 drugs over the past four years.

These include common medicines like Telmisartan and Ramipril used to treat high blood pressure, Nimesulide, a pain medication with fever-reducing properties, and even Calamine lotion, used to treat mild itchiness. While the average MRP of Telmisartan 20 mg tablets sold by the top three leading brands is Rs 33.80, the BPPI MRP is Rs 6.73. Other tablets cost less than half the market price as well.

A former employee of BPPI told DH, “Fifty percent of the sales of generic medicines come from the five southern states. In 2019, out of sales worth Rs 310 crore Karnataka, Kerala, Tamil Nadu, Andhra Pradesh and Telangana alone accounted for Rs 149 crore. After Uttar Pradesh, it is Karnataka that has one of the highest Kendras but they are being dumped with short shelf-life drugs from private manufacturers and substandard drugs.”

“Many of these drugs have not only reached the stores but were also sold causing an allergic reaction in patients. For example, a Kendra owner in Bengaluru, demanded a quality check report of a calcium tablet’s batch after the patient, a young boy’s tongue turned blue,” he told DH showing the drug code and batch number. DH reviewed the picture of the child showing his discoloured tongue.

The Karnataka Whatsapp group of Jan Aushadhi Kendra owners is flooded with frequent complaints of not-of-standard-quality (NSQ) drugs and shortage of supply complaints. “Many of these drugs have a shelf-life of less than three months,” he said.

Cetirizine is an antihistamine used to relieve allergy symptoms such as watery eyes and runny nose. Five batches of it were recalled in October last year just two months before its expiry. It was manufactured in February 2018.

Source: DH, Wikipedia

Also Read:

LEAVE A REPLY

Please enter your comment!
Please enter your name here

Related articles

Smart Meter Standoff: West Bengal Pauses Amid Bill Backlash, Karnataka Continues Deployment Despite Public Concern

West Bengal Halts Smart Meter Deployment for Residential Users Following Backlash on Excessive Bills June 11, 2025 –Responding to...

Maharashtra’s New Social Media Guidelines for Government Employees | Freedom of Speech or Control? | Digital Discipline or Silent Dictatorship?

The Maharashtra government has ordered employees to follow new social media guidelines that ban employees from criticizing currently,...

The Need for Integrative Thinking in Medicine: A Critical Analysis of COVID-19 Vaccine Rollout in India – Dr. Amitav Banerjee

NIMHANS Bengaluru Research Fuels Urgent Call for Critical Appraisal of India’s COVID-19 Vaccine Rollout Amidst Neurological Concerns As India...

Improving Public Education on Cervical Cancer: Dr. Maya Valecha’s Insights

Concerns Surrounding the Cervical Cancer Vaccine in India An article by Dr. Maya Valecha critiques the Indian government's promotion...