Uploaded by VOALearningEnglish on Apr 7, 2010
This is the VOA Special English Development Report, from http://voaspecialenglish.com
We talked last week about counterfeit medicines and how the problem
is especially bad in Africa, Asia and Latin America. The World Health Organization says up to thirty percent of the medicine sold in many developing countries is not real.
It also estimates that up to fifty percent of the medicine sold on the Internet is counterfeit. That can put people at risk even in wealthy countries that represent only a small part of the counterfeit drug market.
Today we look at what is being done
to fight counterfeit drugs.
Several companies are developing ways to make counterfeits easier to identify. And there are existing methods, like a machine that can quickly identify chemicals in pills to confirm if the pills are real.
Other ideas include things like special tracking codes for drug packages. People could send a text message with the code and get a message back confirming that what they bought is listed in a database.
Some drug makers and other companies put three-dimensional images called holograms on their products as a security device.
Other anti-counterfeit efforts
include the use of radio frequency identification tags. Many companies use these electronic tags to follow products through the supply chain from the manufacturer. The American Food and Drug Administration says RFID tags act like an electronic safety net to make it easier to catch counterfeits. Last July, the Food and Drug Administration advised manufacturers to add what are called physical chemical identifiers to their medicines. These are special chemicals,
colorings or tastes that counterfeiters could not easily copy.
Bryan Liang is with the Partnership for Safe Medicines, an organization in the United States. He says the Internet is not only a place where people can get tricked into buying counterfeit drugs.
It is also a place where counterfeiters can find all the materials they need
to make them.
He says the most important members of the "counterfeit detection team" are the patients themselves. He says raids on counterfeiters are often the result of information from people who
bought fake medicines.
Bryan Liang says people who
know their drugs and the effects
of their drugs are the best
security against fakes.
And that's the VOA Special English Development Report. You can find last week's report on counterfeit drugs at voaspecialenglish.com.
(Adapted from a radio program broadcast 01Mar2010)
Category:
Tags:
- captioned
- subtitled
- videos
- voa
- learning
- special
- english
- report
- development
- agriculture
- food
- farming
- gardening
- health
- medicine
- higher
- education
- international
- students
- elementary
- secondary
- tertiary
- university
- college
- economics
- finance
- american
- business
- communication
- culture
- download
- history
- foreign
- controlled
- language
- learn
- mp3
- music
- news
- plain
- radio
- simple
- speech
- linguistics
- teach
- teacher
- esl
- efl
- teaching
- texts
- transcripts
- TV
- u.s.
- united
- states
- voice
- of
- america
License:
Standard YouTube License
-
1 likes, 0 dislikes
138 videos

Technology Report
3:55
The Dangers of Counterfeit Drugs (First of Two Parts)by VOALearningEnglish9,810 views
4:01
Marking International Womens Dayby VOALearningEnglish6,462 views
4:04
For World's Poor, a Personal Toilet and Source of Fertilizerby VOALearningEnglish7,315 views
4:03
Want to Grow a Root? Beets Are Hard to Beatby VOALearningEnglish5,916 views
4:03
Increasing Food Security in Dry Areas of the Middle Eastby VOALearningEnglish7,492 views
3:52
Vinyl Records Go for a New Spinby VOALearningEnglish348 views
9:13
By Skype: Sanaz, an Iranian graduate student in Swedenby VOALearningEnglish823 views
12:51
By Skype: Iranian actor Arash Hamedianby VOALearningEnglish471 views
3:04
Telling Stories Through Totem Polesby VOALearningEnglish2,125 views
4:01
New Effort to Fight 10 'Neglected' Tropical Diseasesby VOALearningEnglish634 views
4:01
Can Brain Scans of Young Children Predict Reading Problems?by VOALearningEnglish675 views
4:01
A Quick Lesson in Ways Businesses Are Organizedby VOALearningEnglish1,018 views
4:02
Really, It's OK to Pinch Mumsby VOALearningEnglish794 views
4:01
Google Faces Heat Over New Privacy Policyby VOALearningEnglish844 views
2:42
How Facebook Can Affect Your Sense of Happinessby VOALearningEnglish13,191 views
2:57
Drive for 'Green' Cars Leave Some Auto Workers Behindby VOALearningEnglish5,120 views
0:37
D-Dayby VOALearningEnglish9,494 views
1:56
Houston Welcomes Scarlet Spider, Marvel Comics Crime Fighterby VOALearningEnglish3,898 views
1:31
A Fountain of Chocolate, a Rush of Joyby VOALearningEnglish7,296 views
1:49
Looking at a Piece of U.S. History: the Amendment That Banned Slaveryby VOALearningEnglish4,904 views
- Loading more suggestions...
there are companies in the us right now already have been found quilty of conterfiting drugs and still in business because the fine didnt hurt them they still made millions so why are they still in business and not in jail,what part of our gov is getting rich?i mean its common since.any answers?
HaroldWillett 11 months ago