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Counterfeit Medicines in Pakistan: Red Flags Every Buyer Should Know Imagine buying a blood pressure tablet for your father, watching him take it every morning, and discovering weeks later that it contained nothing but chalk and starch. For thousands of Pakistani families, this is not a hypothetical. Counterfeit and substandard medicines remain one of the most serious, and least talked about, public health threats in the country. The World Health Organization estimates that roughly one in ten medical products in low- and middle-income countries is substandard or falsified, and independent studies suggest Pakistan’s share of counterfeit medicines in circulation may run well into double digits. Fake medicines don’t just fail to cure; they can cause organ damage, drug resistance, and death. The 2012 Lahore cardiac medicine tragedy, in which contaminated tablets killed more than 200 heart patients, remains a painful reminder of what is at stake. The good news is that counterfeiters leave clues. If you know what to look for, on the packaging, on the tablet itself, at the point of sale, and in the price tag, you can dramatically reduce your risk. This guide walks you through the red flags every Pakistani buyer should know. First, Understand What “Counterfeit” Really Means Not all bad medicine is the same. Broadly, unsafe medicines in Pakistan fall into three categories: Falsified medicines: deliberate fakes that misrepresent their identity or source. They may contain no active ingredient, the wrong ingredient, or dangerous contaminants, packaged to look identical to a genuine brand. Substandard medicines: genuine products that fail quality standards, often because of poor manufacturing, degraded ingredients, or improper storage in heat and humidity. Unregistered medicines: products sold without approval from the Drug Regulatory Authority of Pakistan (DRAP). Even if the medicine itself is real, an unregistered import has bypassed every quality check in the supply chain. All three can harm you, and all three tend to enter the market through the same weak points: unlicensed sellers, informal importers, and unregulated online marketplaces. Red Flag #1: The Price Is Too Good to Be True Medicine prices in Pakistan are regulated, and genuine imported medicines carry real costs, manufacturing, cold-chain shipping, customs duties, and distributor margins. If a seller offers a branded medicine at 40, 50% below the price printed on the pack or quoted by licensed pharmacies, treat it as a warning, not a bargain. Counterfeiters compete on price because it is the easiest way to move volume quickly. A small discount from a licensed pharmacy is normal; a dramatic one from an unknown seller on social media almost never is. Red Flag #2: Packaging That Doesn’t Pass Close Inspection Packaging is where most fakes give themselves away. Before you open any medicine, spend thirty seconds examining the box and blister pack: Blurry printing or faded colours. Genuine manufacturers use high-quality printing. Smudged logos, misaligned text, or washed-out colours suggest a copy. Spelling and grammar mistakes. Counterfeiters frequently misspell drug names, manufacturer names, or dosage instructions. Compare against a pack you know is genuine, or the manufacturer’s website. Missing or tampered seals. Broken shrink wrap, re-glued flaps, or blister packs that look resealed are immediate disqualifiers. No batch number, manufacturing date, or expiry date. Every legitimate medicine sold in Pakistan must display these, along with the manufacturer’s or importer’s details. If any are missing, smeared, or printed on a sticker pasted over the box, walk away. Missing DRAP registration number. Registered medicines carry a registration number on the pack. Its absence is a strong sign the product entered the market through informal channels. A useful habit: when you find a brand and batch that works for you, photograph the packaging. The next time you buy, compare fonts, colours, hologram placement, and embossing side by side. Red Flag #3: The Medicine Itself Looks or Behaves Differently If you take a medicine regularly, you are the best inspector of it. Be alert to: Changes in appearance: tablets that are a different shade, size, or shape than usual; capsules that are dented, sticky, or leaking; unusual coating or excessive powder in the blister. Strange taste or smell: a chemical, bitter, or musty odour that wasn’t there before. Tablets that crumble or dissolve oddly: poorly compressed fakes often break apart in the pack or dissolve instantly in the mouth when the genuine product does not. Sudden loss of effect or new side effects: if your regular blood pressure, diabetes, or thyroid medicine suddenly “stops working,” or you develop unexplained reactions, do not simply increase the dose. Consult your doctor and get the pack examined. Red Flag #4: The Seller Raises Questions Where you buy matters as much as what you buy. Counterfeit medicines overwhelmingly reach consumers through informal channels. Be cautious of: Unlicensed medical stores. Every pharmacy in Pakistan must hold a valid drug sale licence and, ideally, have a qualified pharmacist on the premises. Licensed pharmacies display their licence, don’t hesitate to ask to see it. Street vendors and bazaar stalls selling loose tablets, especially painkillers, antibiotics, and sexual health products, which are among the most commonly counterfeited categories in Pakistan. Social media sellers and WhatsApp dealers with no physical address, no licence number, and no way to trace the product back to a distributor. Online marketplaces with anonymous third-party sellers, where a genuine listing photo can conceal an entirely different product in the parcel. Buying online is not the problem, unverified sellers are. A legitimate HYPERLINK "https://deltapharmacy.pk" online pharmacy in Pakistan will display its licence details, operate from a verifiable physical location, source stock from authorised distributors, provide proper invoices, and have a pharmacist available to answer questions. Established platforms such as HYPERLINK "https://onlinepharmacy.pk" OnlinePharmacy.pk , which supply DRAP-compliant and properly imported medicines with documented sourcing, exist precisely because patients need a traceable alternative to the informal market. Whichever service you use, apply the same test: can you see who they are, where they operate, and where the medicine came from? Red Flag #5: No Paper Trail Genuine supply chains generate paperwork; counterfeit ones avoid it. Always insist on a proper receipt showing the pharmacy’s name, the medicine, batch number if possible, and the price. A seller who refuses to give a receipt is telling you something. Keep receipts for expensive or long-term medicines, they are essential if you ever need to report a suspect product or trace a recall. How to Verify a Medicine in Pakistan If something feels off, you have practical options: Check the DRAP registration. The Drug Regulatory Authority of Pakistan maintains records of registered drugs. Your pharmacist can confirm whether a product and its importer are registered. Use manufacturer verification tools. Many multinational manufacturers now print QR codes, unique serial numbers, or scratch-off verification codes on packs that can be checked via SMS or the company’s website. If the pack advertises a verification feature, use it. Ask the pharmacist to cross-check the batch. Licensed pharmacies can trace a batch back to their distributor. Informal sellers cannot. Compare with a known genuine pack from a hospital pharmacy or the manufacturer’s authorised distributor. What to Do If You Suspect a Fake Stop taking the medicine immediately and contact your doctor, especially if you’ve experienced side effects or a loss of therapeutic effect. Keep everything: the remaining medicine, packaging, blister strips, and receipt. These are evidence. Report it.









