According to the coalition, the BFAD needs an additional budget so it can implement Republic Act 8203 or the Special Law on Counterfeit Drugs strictly.
"There are not enough BFAD regulatory officers who are needed to efficiently monitor the movement of counterfeit medicines," it said.
The Department of Health (DOH) has estimated that counterfeit medicines now account for 10 percent of the countrys P95-billion pharmaceutical industry.
The World Health Organization itself has stepped up its campaign against fake medicines by coming up with the Rapid Alert System (RAS), the worlds first Web-based system for tracking the activities of counterfeiters. Sheila Crisostomo