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Woman arrested for selling unregistered pharmaceutical
product
12
Mar 2010
A 49-year-old woman was today (March 12) arrested in a joint operation
between the Department of Health (DH) and the police as part of
a follow-up investigation into the sale of an unregistered slimming
product which was earlier found to contain undeclared Western drug
ingredients.
The woman was suspected of selling the product named "Zhongcaoyao¡XJiankangjianfei".
Two boxes of the product were seized from the woman at the time
of her arrest.
Late last year, the department obtained the product concerned from
an Internet auction website during the department's surveillance
operation.
The department issued a warning last December reminding people
not to take the product as laboratory tests on the product showed
the presence of sibutramine and its analogues.
The spokesman said the product was not a registered pharmaceutical
product in Hong Kong.
The spokesman said that sibutramine was a western medicine used
as an appetite suppressant. Its side-effects included increased
blood pressure and heart rate, psychosis and possibly convulsion.
People with heart problems should not take it.
The sibutramine analogue, being chemically similar to sibutramine,
is expected to have the same side effects as sibutramine.
A product containing sibutramine must be registered before it can
be sold in Hong Kong. It can be sold only on a doctor's prescription
and dispensed under the supervision of a pharmacist.
He said, "Sale of unregistered pharmaceutical products is
an offence under the Pharmacy and Poisons Ordinance. The maximum
penalty is a fine of $100,000 and two years' imprisonment.
The spokesman urged people not to sell or buy products of unknown
or doubtful composition.
"The safety and quality of products with unknown ingredients
are doubtful. Anyone in unlawful possession of products containing
controlled drugs such as dangerous drugs is liable to prosecution."
People should stop using the products immediately. They should
see a doctor if they feel unwell after taking the product.
They should destroy and dispose of the products or submit them
to the department's Pharmaceutical Service at 3/F, Public Health
Laboratory Centre, 382 Nam Cheong Street, Kowloon, during office
hours.
The spokesman said, "Weight control should be achieved through
good diet and appropriate exercise. People should consult healthcare
professionals before using any medication for weight control."
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