The WHO has sounded the alarm over toxic industrial chemicals contaminating medicines, particularly affecting children. Diethylene glycol and ethylene glycol, often illegally substituted in syrups, have caused over 1,300 deaths in the past century. Recent outbreaks in The Gambia, Indonesia, and Uzbekistan highlight systemic supply chain failures. The agency demands urgent regulatory action to prevent further tragedies.
July 25, 2025
WHO calls for urgent global action on contamination of medicines with toxic chemicals
"These substances can cause severe
health issues and be fatal if ingested, even in small amounts, especially for
children." – WHO
New Delhi, July 24: The World Health
Organization (WHO) on Thursday called out the need for urgent regulatory action
against contamination of medicines with industrial-grade toxic chemicals,
posing severe health risks, especially among children.
Key Points
1 WHO
highlights deadly DEG and EG contamination in medicines
2 Over
1,300 deaths linked to toxic excipients since 1930s
3 Criminal
networks exploit weak supply chain oversight
4 Low-income
nations face highest risks due to lax regulations
Calling it
a “tragic and ongoing public health crisis”, the WHO mainly focussed on
diethylene glycol (DEG) and ethylene glycol (EG).
“These substances are used as industrial
solvents and antifreeze agents but can cause severe health issues and be fatal
if ingested, even in small amounts, especially for children. They are often
illegally substituted for pharmaceutical-grade excipients such as propylene
glycol, glycerin, and sorbitol -- ingredients used in the formulation of medicines,
including cough and paracetamol syrups,” the WHO said.
In a report jointly released with the United
Nations Office on Drugs and Crime (UNODC), the global health body unveiled
critical findings on the persistent and preventable threat of contaminated
medicines, which claimed the lives and compromised the health of countless
patients, predominantly children, through the ingestion of medicines with
dangerously high levels of toxic chemicals.
“Over the past 90 years, at least 25
documented incidents of excipient contamination have resulted in more than
1,300 deaths worldwide, many of them children,” the WHO said. The more recent
case was in The Gambia, in which at least 66 children lost their lives, quickly
followed by similar incidents in Indonesia and Uzbekistan, with a further 268
reported deaths.
“These incidents occur often due to systemic
vulnerabilities in the global supply chain of pharmaceutical excipients, and
they have disproportionately affected people in low- and middle-income
countries (LMICs), where regulatory oversight and access to quality-assured
medicines may be limited,” the WHO said.
The report also revealed how criminal
networks exploit market volatility and regulatory gaps to introduce toxic
substitutes into the supply chain. These include the use of falsified labels
and substitution of toxic chemicals for legitimate excipients such as propylene
glycol; the marketing of falsified excipients via online platforms, including
e-commerce and social media, among others.
The WHO called for urgent global action to
close regulatory gaps, strengthen oversight of excipient supply chains, and protect
all populations, especially children, from preventable and deadly poisoning.
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