The country’s pharma plants have continued to run through the nationwide lockdown, and now a few cases of employees testing positive for the novel coronavirus (Covid-19) have started flowing in. While most hubs continue to operate despite these challenges, state regulators are on their toes to ensure that production is not hit and protocols are followed.
In Himachal’s Baddi, for example, some first information reports (FIRs), too, have been registered in cases where deviation to the advised protocol has been observed. With around 50 plants in Baddi, Himachal came under a containment zone area and the state FDA is now on its toes to ensure that none get affected.
Speaking to Business Standard, Navneet Marwaha, state drug controller of Himachal Pradesh, said we have asked all our drug inspectors to visit the manufacturing plants daily. They will ensure that standard operating procedures (SoPs) are being strictly followed.
A 50-point SoP has been handed over to the plants and we are closely monitoring the functioning. About 400 pharma units are now operational in all of Himachal. So far, no positive cases have come up here, fortunately,” he said.
Marwaha added that the police are also helping to ensure that safety protocols are being followed in the manufacturing belt. Buses carrying employees need to be filled up to 30-35 per cent capacity. Any deviation can now attract penal action in Baddi.
Gujarat, that roughly accounts for 35 per cent of India’s pharma production and even exports, has not been so lucky. With workers at Cadila Pharmaceuticals’ Dholka facility and Sun Pharma’s Halol unit testing positive, more stringent safety and sanitization measures may be expected now, say industry players.
Recently, while 26 workers at Cadila Pharmaceuticals facility in Ahmedabad tested positive for Covid-19, one person at Sun Pharma’s Halol plant tested positive.
A Cadila Pharma spokesperson said the company had closed its operations and undertaken deep sanitization of the plant and its surroundings. “We are cooperating with the local administration at all levels to ensure the safety and security of our facility and surroundings. Being an essential industry, we remain committed to restore normalcy at the plant at the earliest in consultation with the authorities,” the spokesperson further stated.
The country’s largest drug maker, too, had to grapple with employees testing positive for the novel coronavirus. Recently, Sun Pharma had revealed that one of its employees at the Halol plant, near Vadodara in Gujarat, had tested positive for the virus.