Key Points

Another child has died from toxic cough syrup in Nagpur, bringing the death toll to 22. The Coldrif syrup contained dangerous diethylene glycol that causes kidney failure. Police have arrested the pharmaceutical company owner and sealed the manufacturing unit. Several children remain in critical condition as this tragedy exposes serious gaps in India's drug safety regulations.

Key Points: Toxic Coldrif Cough Syrup Death Toll Rises to 22 in Nagpur

  • Five-year-old Mayank Suryavanshi died from kidney failure after consuming toxic Coldrif syrup
  • Sresan Pharma owner Ranganathan Govindrajan arrested as police seal manufacturing unit
  • Cough syrup contained dangerous diethylene glycol despite 2023 ban on formulations
  • Madhya Pradesh suspends drug inspectors and transfers state drug controller
2 min read

Toxic cough syrup claims another life in Nagpur hospital, toll rises to 22

Five-year-old Mayank Suryavanshi dies from toxic cough syrup containing diethylene glycol, sparking arrests and suspensions in Madhya Pradesh tragedy.

"The syrup has been found to contain diethylene glycol (DEG), a toxic industrial solvent that can cause acute kidney damage and death - Officials"

Bhopal/Chhindwara, Oct 9

The death toll from the toxic Coldrif cough syrup tragedy in Madhya Pradesh’s Chhindwara district has risen to 22, following the death of five-year-old Mayank Suryavanshi.

Mayank, a resident of Khajri Antu village, was admitted to a hospital in Nagpur in critical condition and succumbed late Wednesday night to suspected kidney failure.

Officials confirmed that Mayank’s death is linked to the consumption of Coldrif, a cough syrup manufactured by Tamil Nadu-based Sresan Pharmaceuticals. The syrup has been found to contain diethylene glycol (DEG), a toxic industrial solvent that can cause acute kidney damage and death, especially in children.

The tragedy has triggered a massive investigation and public outcry. The Madhya Pradesh Police have formed a Special Investigation Team (SIT) to probe the deaths and have arrested Sresan Pharma’s owner, Ranganathan Govindrajan, from Chennai.

The drug manufacturing unit in Kanchipuram has been sealed, and authorities are working to obtain transit remand to bring Govindan to Chhindwara for further interrogation.

In response to the mounting fatalities, the Madhya Pradesh government has suspended two drug inspectors and a deputy director of the Food and Drug Administration. The state’s drug controller has also been transferred.

The deputy chief minister has also removed Naresh Gonnade, Chief Medical and Health Officer of Chhindwara, on Wednesday. Also, Parasia-based Dr Praveen Soni was arrested for alleged negligence, though his arrest has sparked protests from the Indian Medical Association, which has threatened an indefinite strike in the district.

The Coldrif syrup was reportedly prescribed to children suffering from common colds and coughs. However, lab tests revealed dangerously high levels of DEG and other banned chemical combinations, including Paracetamol, Chlorpheniramine, and Phenylephrine, which lack warning labels and pose serious health risks.

Despite a central directive issued in 2023 banning such formulations for children under four, enforcement has been lax. Many pharmaceutical companies failed to update product labelling, and state authorities did not initiate adequate public awareness campaigns.

With several children still undergoing treatment in Nagpur hospitals, five of them in critical condition, the death toll may rise further. The Chhindwara tragedy has reignited concerns over drug safety, regulatory oversight, and accountability in India’s pharmaceutical sector.

- IANS

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Reader Comments

R
Rohit P
As a parent, this news terrifies me. We trust doctors and medicines to help our children, not kill them. The entire pharmaceutical supply chain needs better monitoring. My prayers with all affected families 🙏
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Sarah B
While I agree the company owners should be punished, suspending drug inspectors and transferring officials is just optics. We need systemic reforms and proper implementation of existing regulations. This keeps happening every few years.
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Arjun K
The 2023 directive was there but no enforcement. Typical Indian bureaucracy - rules on paper but no ground implementation. Small towns and villages suffer the most because awareness is low and regulation is weak.
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Michael C
This is criminal negligence of the highest order. Diethylene glycol in cough syrup? How does this even happen? The company owners should face murder charges, not just negligence cases.
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Nisha Z
Poor little Mayank... just 5 years old. This could happen to any of our children. We need immediate awareness campaigns in regional languages about dangerous medicines. Jai Hind 🇮🇳
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Karthik V
While the pharmaceutical company is primarily responsible, doctors should also be more careful about which brands they prescribe. Many just write whatever the medical representative promotes without checking quality.

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