Now Playing

Bill key to regulate abuse of medications, says Forde

Minister of People Empowerment and Elder Affairs Adrian Forde is sounding a warning about the abuse of over-the counter medications or leftover prescription drugs mixed into dangerous concoctions by young people.

The practice was causing concern for the Cabinet, said Forde, a pharmacist, adding that the Barbados Medical Products Bill, 2026, passed in the House of Assembly yesterday, was important to regulate the abuse.

He said the medication was acquired from some establishments that were not pharmacies and, using the Internet, young people researched the different combinations and their effects.

“Because those things were passed from regulatory bodies before you can go any place, once they’re commercial enterprises, you can go and take them off the shelf. Now, the danger in this, and that’s why I’m happy that this new law, when it’s passed, in this august Chamber . . . that it has that regulation where there will be officers, inspectors at any place that has a pharmaceutical product,” said the parliamentary representative for Christ Church West Central.

The oversight would target instances in which substances such as codeine and panadine and codeine, found in common medications, are mixed with Sprite and sweets to create something called “lean”.

“After they’re taking these products, they can’t remember the activities that they were involved in. I believe that this is one of the biggest fights that we must now, as a country, come together and unite and fight against – the polydrug use by persons in Barbados and, unfortunately, the young people in this country,” he told the House.

Some of the drugs were imported under the guise of vitamins and that is where the pharmaco vigilance becomes important, Forde added.

“This is where the vigilance at the level of your organisation speaks to having the labs to test. This is where the vigilance comes into play. Because if you are saying that it is yohimbe or ginseng in capsule form, when it is tested randomly, the lab report must come to show that it is indeed yohimbe, ginseng, or any other vitamin, and not methamphetamine, as is the case sometimes.

“That is how drugs are moved across borders in the world, in the international sphere. That’s how it happens across the world, by coming in under the guise of other medication,” he said.

Meanwhile, his colleague Dr Sonia Browne had concerns about items being removed from the shelves of establishments, especially harmful fade creams, being returned because of a lack of enforcement.

She wants regulation for herbal medications, sexual enhancement medication and fade creams.

Browne said that as a member of the Pharmacy Council, she was aware of problems with entities importing dangerous fade creams that could wreak havoc on the user’s immunity system. She spoke of a case where someone died in Jamaica after constant use of fade cream resulted in her body being unable to fight off illness.

“We had cases at the Pharmacy Council, where you cleared out an area one day, no backing from the Police Service – the legislation said that we could. But the next day, the products or new set of products were back on the shelf. I am hoping that this authority now will have the teeth to see these things through, where people cannot – and they see it in the legislation – bring in, import things willy-nilly and put it on the shelf and market it to unsuspecting individuals.” ( AC)

The post Bill key to regulate abuse of medications, says Forde appeared first on nationnews.com.

Share the Post:
📲 Download the LOUD App
Faster access. Better experience. Tap once and you’re locked in.
🎧 Live Radio 24/7
🔥 Top DJs + Trending Shows
⚡ Instant tap & play
Available on Google Play
You can always listen on web too. iOS App Coming Soon!

#LOUD

Music Submission

Fill out the form below, and we will be in touch shortly.
Contact Information
Upload & Submit