Pakistan's Medicine Crisis: Policy Delays Fuel Shortage of Vital Drugs

Pakistan is experiencing a severe shortage of essential medicines, including advanced cancer therapies and vital vaccines. Healthcare experts attribute the crisis primarily to government delays in officially notifying prices for newly approved drugs, which deters importers. This scarcity spans treatments for cancer, typhoid, polio, rabies, haemophilia, and malaria, severely impacting patient care. Officials warn the situation could fuel a dangerous black market for smuggled or counterfeit medicines, exposing systemic healthcare governance failures.

Key Points: Pakistan Faces Critical Medicine Shortage Due to Policy Delays

  • Critical drug shortage nationwide
  • Policy delays halt price notifications
  • Cancer treatments and vaccines scarce
  • Risk of counterfeit medicines rising
2 min read

Policy delays leave Pakistan short of critical medicines

Essential medicines, including cancer drugs and vaccines, are scarce in Pakistan due to regulatory price-fixing delays, risking patient safety.

"Without formal price fixation, pharmaceutical companies and importers are reluctant to bring these products into the country - Industry sources"

Karachi, March 12

Pakistan is witnessing a growing shortage of several essential medicines, leaving patients and their families struggling to access vital treatments, including advanced cancer drugs, vaccines and other life-saving therapies.

Healthcare experts, pharmaceutical traders and industry insiders warn that the scarcity is affecting multiple regions of the country and creating serious concerns about patient care.

The shortage has been observed across pharmacies and medical facilities, where many crucial medicines are either unavailable or in extremely limited supply, as reported by Dawn.

According to Dawn, industry representatives say the problem is not linked to regional instability or disruptions in global supply chains.

Instead, they attribute the situation largely to policy delays within Pakistan's regulatory system.

Pharmaceutical sources stated that most medicines and raw materials imported into Pakistan originate from China, which continues to remain commercially active and capable of supplying pharmaceutical products.

However, the key challenge lies in the government's failure to officially notify prices for several newly approved medicines.

Without formal price fixation, pharmaceutical companies and importers are reluctant to bring these products into the country due to the risk of regulatory scrutiny.

Suppliers fear that distributing medicines without officially approved prices could expose them to legal complications.

Doctors say the shortage has significantly affected access to modern cancer treatments, which are widely used globally to treat various forms of cancer, including leukaemia.

Medical specialists stress that these therapies are considered standard treatments in many parts of the world, and their absence in Pakistan deprives patients of advanced medical care that could improve survival rates.

Apart from oncology drugs, other important medicines are also becoming scarce, as highlighted by Dawn.

Several vaccines are also reportedly affected, including those for typhoid, polio and pneumococcal infections.

Treatments for rabies exposure, haemophilia and malaria have also been impacted by the ongoing shortage.

Industry officials say the delay in notifying prices, despite recommendations already submitted by the Drug Regulatory Authority of Pakistan, has stalled the legal introduction of several medicines into the market.

Experts warn that such shortages may encourage the spread of smuggled, counterfeit or unregulated medicines, putting patients' lives at serious risk while highlighting persistent weaknesses in Pakistan's healthcare governance, as reported by Dawn.

- ANI

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Reader Comments

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Priya S
Very sad situation. Cancer patients and children missing vaccines is a serious failure of governance. The part about smuggled medicines is a huge red flag 🚩. We've seen similar issues when supply chains break down. Hope the authorities wake up and fix the price notification process immediately. Health should never be held hostage to paperwork.
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Aman W
From an industry perspective, this is a classic case of policy paralysis. If the recommendations are already with the authority, what's the delay? Companies won't risk legal trouble. It's a basic rule. This indirectly shows the importance of the work our own National Pharmaceutical Pricing Authority does, despite the criticisms it sometimes faces.
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Sarah B
This is a humanitarian crisis in the making. Polio vaccines too? That's terrifying. As someone who has worked in public health, consistent immunization is key to eradication. Delays in one country can have regional consequences. The international community should maybe offer technical assistance to streamline their regulatory process.
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Vikram M
While our sympathies are with the patients, this also highlights a strategic point. Heavy reliance on a single country (China) for APIs and raw materials is a global vulnerability. India has been trying to boost its own production with schemes like PLI. This news should accelerate those efforts everywhere. Atithi Devo Bhava, but not for essential medicine supply chains!
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Karthik V
A respectful criticism: We in India should not view this with any sense of superiority. Our system has its own flaws—drug shortages in rural areas, quality issues with some generics. This is a wake-up call for the entire subcontinent to prioritize robust, transparent, and efficient healthcare logistics. Jai Hind

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