More ways industrial chemicals are landing up where they can kill.
In China at least 18 people, most of them in Guangdong Province, died in a month last year after they ingested contaminated medicine.
So reports the New York Times in the May 6 article, From China to Panama, a Trail of Poisoned Medicine .
Walt Bogdanich and Jake Hooker write:
"The kidneys fail first. Then the central nervous system begins to misfire. Paralysis spreads, making breathing difficult, then often impossible without assistance. In the end, most victims die.
"Many of them are children, poisoned at the hands of their unsuspecting parents.
"The syrupy poison, diethylene glycol, is an indispensable part of the modern world, an industrial solvent and prime ingredient in some antifreeze.
"It is also a killer. And the deaths, if not intentional, are often no accident.
"Over the years, the poison has been loaded into all varieties of medicine — cough syrup, fever medication, injectable drugs — a result of counterfeiters who profit by substituting the sweet-tasting solvent for a safe, more expensive syrup, usually glycerin, commonly used in drugs, food, toothpaste and other products.
"Toxic syrup has figured in at least eight mass poisonings around the world in the past two decades. Researchers estimate that thousands have died. In many cases, the precise origin of the poison has never been determined. But records and interviews show that in three of the last four cases it was made in China, a major source of counterfeit drugs."
This is a picture of Ernesto Osorio of Panama. Poison cough syrup from China hospitalized him Panama last year and partly paralyzed his face. The story continues,
"Panama is the most recent victim. Last year, government officials there unwittingly mixed diethylene glycol into 260,000 bottles of cold medicine — with devastating results. Families have reported 365 deaths from the poison, 100 of which have been confirmed so far. With the onset of the rainy season, investigators are racing to exhume as many potential victims as possible before bodies decompose even more.
"Panama’s death toll leads directly to Chinese companies that made and exported the poison as 99.5 percent pure glycerin."
A pediatrician told the reporters the problem is vastly underreported.
"Beyond Panama and China, toxic syrup has caused mass poisonings in Haiti, Bangladesh, Argentina, Nigeria and twice in India."
And here's the most disheartening part of this unnecessary tragedy:
"In China, the government is vowing to clean up its pharmaceutical industry...but when Chinese officials investigated the role of Chinese companies in the Panama deaths, they found that no laws had been broken."
For the rest of the article, click here.