India Today

The Elusive Miracle Drug

Rudra Govind runs a pharmacy in Delhi’s Shahdara. He remembers the rush for hydroxychloroquine in April when the ICMR (Indian Council of Medical Research) announced it as a possible prophylactic—his stock sold out within two days. Predictably, there is a similar surge in demand for two new Covid drugs—Favipiravir and Remdesivir—as they enter the market.

Since news broke on June 21 that pharmaceutical company Glenmark’s Favipiravir formulation FabiFlu had been cleared by the DCGI (Drug Controller General of India) for ‘restricted emergency use’ in ‘mild to moderate cases’, Govind has received daily enquiries about the medicine. It didn’t seem to matter that Favipiravir, like Remdesivir before it, was not a

You’re reading a preview, subscribe to read more.

More from India Today

India Today2 min read
The Right Balance
WITH THE POST-COVID RECOVERY IN FULL SWING, MAINTAINING THE country’s fiscal balance is a must. Union finance minister Nirmala Sitharaman was justly applauded for not hitting the panic button or taking drastic fiscal management measures during the pa
India Today2 min read
A Sluggish Pace
PRIVATE INVESTMENT, ALONG WITH CONSUMPTION, government spending and exports, is a key component of growth. After the NDA came to power in 2014, private investment increased initially, but soon began to slow down. Total value of completed investment p
India Today2 min read
Struggling for Survival
THE MSME (MICRO, SMALL & MEDIUM ENTERPRISES) SECTOR was among the worst hit in the Covid-19 pandemic. Numerous units shut shop due to a lack of consumer demand and liquidity. To help businesses stay afloat, the government implemented various schemes,

Related Books & Audiobooks