Delese Mimi Darko
THE DRUGS Laboratory at the Centre for Laboratory Services and Research (CLSR) of the Food and Drugs Authority (FDA) has been awarded a WHO-Prequalified Quality Control Laboratory (QCL) Status.
By this achievement, the FDA is now the only food and drugs regulatory agency within the ECOWAS sub-region to be recognised internationally as a competent institution that can test medicines and medical products under WHO auspices.
The results of medicines tested by the FDA will become acceptable to all countries henceforth.
A statement from the FDA, which made this known, stated that the benefits of this new status of the authority means the laboratory will serve as a Regional Centre of Excellence and train other National Drug Regulatory Agencies in the sub-region; the FDA can fully participate in international tenders to analyse products that are to be procured by UN agencies such as UNICEF and the Global Fund; while also Certificate of Analysis offered by FDA for locally-manufactured medicines in Ghana shall receive international recognition and boost their permeation into the international market.
With the prequalified lab in Ghana, the African Continental Free Trade Area (AfCFTA) provides additional opportunities to Ghanaian pharmaceutical companies within the African market.
The statement added that the FDA’s laboratory has, by this feat, become a key international player in the testing and verifying of finished pharmaceutical products to ensure that they meet international standards of safety, quality, and efficacy, and will require all the necessary support to maintain this new status.
Additionally, as the FDA’s laboratory has become a prequalified QCL, the FDA may be invited to participate in WHO prequalification monitoring projects that are undertaken periodically to assess the quality of medicines procured by UN agencies.
“With this accomplishment by the FDA’s laboratory as the only WHO-prequalified laboratory in the ECOWAS sub-region, the authority is in readiness and poised to provide effective regulation to support the national vaccine manufacturing agenda, and ensure access to quality, safe and efficacious vaccines and medicines for the nation and the African continent,” the statement underscored.
BY Daniel Bampoe