Buyer beware


Buyer Beware — Drug Quality, Traceability & Counterfeit Pharmaceuticals

UPSC Prelims + Mains Study Note | GS-II / GS-III


1. At a Glance


2. Why in the News


3. Background & Evolution

Year Milestone
2002 Drugs & Cosmetics Rules amended — foundational Schedule H framework for prescription-only drugs. [S2]
~2013 Schedule H1 introduced — stricter sub-category for habit-forming and high-risk drugs requiring written prescriptions and record-keeping by pharmacists. [S2]
Nov 2022 GSR 823(E) — Drugs Rules amended; Schedule H2 created, mandating barcode/QR codes on primary/secondary packaging of the top 300 brands of specified formulations. Effective 1 August 2023. [S1]
2022–23 Parallel regulation: QR codes also mandated on Active Pharmaceutical Ingredients (APIs/bulk drugs) at each packaging level for track-and-trace. [S1]
2026 Expansion of Schedule H2 coverage to entire therapeutic classes (not just specific brands). [S4]

4. Core Static Facts

Definitions - Substandard medicine: Licensed product that fails to meet quality standards or specifications. - Falsified/Counterfeit medicine: Deliberately/fraudulently misrepresenting identity, composition, or source. - Schedule H2: A sub-schedule under the Drugs & Cosmetics Rules, 1945; covers drugs warranting enhanced authentication and traceability. [S1]

Regulatory Architecture - Parent Act: Drugs and Cosmetics Act, 1940; Rules 1945. - Implementing Ministry: Ministry of Health & Family Welfare. - Enforcement Agency: Central Drugs Standard Control Organisation (CDSCO) under DGHS. - Related agency: Narcotics Control Bureau (NCB) — monitors opioid/psychotropic leakage. [S4]

QR/Barcode Mandate — Key Technical Facts - Data encoded: product identifier, manufacturing licence number, batch number, and other traceability details. [S4] - Coverage (pre-2026): Top 300 brands of drug formulations under Schedule H2. [S1] - Coverage (post-2026 notification): Entire therapeutic classes of Schedule H2 drugs. [S4] - Also applies to: All APIs manufactured or imported in India. [S1]

Global Burden (WHO) - 1 in 10 medicines in low- and middle-income countries (LMICs) is substandard or falsified. [S3] - Estimated global cost: US$ 30.5 billion per year in substandard/falsified products. [S3] - Most commonly falsified: antimalarials and antibiotics. [S3]


5. Multi-Dimensional Analysis

Economic

Social / Public Health

Environmental / Scientific (AMR)

Legal / Constitutional

Geopolitical / Strategic

Ethical / Governance


6. Recent Developments (last 12–18 months)


7. Prelims Hooks

  1. Schedule H2 was introduced via GSR 823(E) and came into force on 1 August 2023. [S1]
  2. The barcode/QR mandate under Schedule H2 initially covered the top 300 brands of drug formulations. [S1]
  3. The QR code on Schedule H2 drugs encodes: product identifier, manufacturing licence number, and batch number (among other details). [S4]
  4. APIs (bulk drugs) manufactured or imported in India must also bear QR codes at each packaging level. [S1]
  5. WHO estimates 1 in 10 medical products in developing countries is substandard or falsified (2017 report). [S3]
  6. The global annual cost of substandard/falsified medicines is estimated at US$ 30.5 billion. [S3]
  7. Most commonly falsified medical products globally: antimalarials and antibiotics. [S3]
  8. India has one of the world's highest antimicrobial resistance (AMR) rates — sub-standard antimicrobials are a contributing driver. [S4]
  9. Implementing Ministry for Schedule H2: Ministry of Health & Family Welfare (not Ministry of Commerce). [S1]
  10. The USTR Special 301 Report identifies India as a leading source of counterfeit medicines. [S4]
  11. The Narcotics Control Bureau (NCB) — not CDSCO alone — has flagged leakage of medicinal opioids into illicit markets. [S4]
  12. The 2026 policy shift expanded Schedule H2 to entire therapeutic classes from a previously curated brand list — characterised as moving from revenue-based to risk-based regulation. [S4]
  13. Parent legislation: Drugs and Cosmetics Act, 1940; operative rules: Drugs and Cosmetics Rules, 1945.

8. Mains Relevance

GS Paper Syllabus Heading
GS-II Health — issues relating to development; Government policies and interventions
GS-III Indian Economy — pharmaceutical sector; Science & Technology — drug regulation
GS-IV Ethics in governance — transparency, accountability, public trust

Plausible Mains Questions 1. "India's pharmaceutical sector is both an asset and a liability in its global health diplomacy." Examine in the context of drug quality concerns raised by the US FDA and WHO. 2. Critically evaluate India's Schedule H2 barcode/QR traceability framework as a tool to combat substandard and counterfeit medicines. What structural reforms are still needed? 3. "Antimicrobial resistance is partly a drug-regulation failure." Discuss with reference to substandard antimicrobials and India's regulatory response.


9. Related Topics to Study Next

Topic Connection
Antimicrobial Resistance (AMR) Substandard antimicrobials directly accelerate AMR — India's AMR National Action Plan links.
Drugs and Cosmetics Act, 1940 Parent legislation governing all drug schedules.
CDSCO & Drug Regulation Architecture Implementing body; understand its federal-state split with State Drug Controllers.
US FDA Import Alerts on India Geopolitical fallout of quality failures; impacts pharma export diplomacy.
National Pharmaceutical Policy Pricing (DPCO), essential medicines, and generic promotion intersect with quality regulation.
Counterfeit Goods & USTR Special 301 IP angle; India's persistent watch-list status.
National Action Plan on AMR (2017–21, renewed) Policy document linking drug quality to resistance containment.
Essential Medicines List (WHO & India) Overlap with Schedule H/H1/H2 drugs; access vs. regulation tension.

10. Common Errors / Trap Areas

  1. Schedule H vs H1 vs H2: H (prescription drugs, broad), H1 (high-risk habit-forming, stricter record-keeping), H2 (traceability/barcode mandate). Confusing them is a common MCQ trap.
  2. Implementing agency: CDSCO (under MoHFW) handles central drug regulation; State Drug Controllers handle retail licensing — federal split is frequently tested.
  3. GSR 823(E) date: The notification was November 2022 but the mandate came into force August 2023 — do not conflate notification date with enforcement date.
  4. "Top 300 brands" vs. therapeutic classes: Pre-2026 = brand list; Post-2026 = therapeutic class expansion. Examiners may test the nature of the expansion.
  5. AMR and substandard drugs: Aspirants often treat AMR as purely a prescribing/overuse issue. The substandard drug → sub-therapeutic dosing → selection pressure pathway is a distinct, less-known causal chain.

11. Sources