Tag Archives: cargo theft

Reliance on Trust in the U.S. Pharma Supply Chain

Trust plays a big role in today’s U.S. pharmaceutical supply chain.  Patients trust that their doctors know what they are doing when they prescribe a medicine and they trust their pharmacist to fill their prescriptions with real medicines that were:

  • manufactured to tight quality specifications,
  • are well within the expiration date,
  • have not been tampered with,
  • have always been kept within recommended environmental tolerances,
  • and have been in the control of companies who have a strong interest in supply chain integrity and in the safety of the drugs within the supply chain.

When we receive our little amber bottles of repackaged drugs from our pharmacist, we aren’t given any way to check on any of those things ourselves.  We trust that the pharmacy has done something to ensure all that.  And fortunately in the U.S., we are almost always justified in that trust.  We enjoy the safest supply chain in the world.

A WHOLE LOT O’ TRUSTIN’ GOIN’ ON

But, now if the pharmacy doesn’t get the drugs directly from the manufacturer, they trust that their wholesaler will supply them with drugs that have those characteristics too.  And if the pharmacy’s wholesaler doesn’t get the drugs directly from the manufacturer, they trust that their wholesaler’s wholesaler provides them with drugs like that too.  And if the pharmacy’s wholesaler’s wholesaler doesn’t get the drugs directly from the manufacturer, they trust that Continue reading Reliance on Trust in the U.S. Pharma Supply Chain

Lessons from “Drug Theft Goes Big”

If you are a regular reader of RxTrace but you still haven’t read Fortune Magazine’s recent article, “Drug Theft Goes Big” by Katherine Eban, then I suggest that you stop reading this essay right now and spend the next 15 minutes absorbing her article carefully.  And then return here for my analysis.  It’s that good and that important.

Many of you will remember Katherine Eban as the author of the excellent book “Dangerous Doses, A True Story of Cops, Counterfeiters and the Contamination of America’s Drug Supply”.  See my comments on the book here where I point out that a lot has changed since the events that are documented so well in the book.

The new Fortune article is a great update on what drug supply chain criminals have been up to since “Dangerous Doses” was published back in 2005.  The greatest thing about the article is Continue reading Lessons from “Drug Theft Goes Big”

How to Stop Pharmaceutical Cargo Theft

Most of us who work on developing and deploying technologies designed to protect the supply chain usually focus on anti-counterfeiting. But that’s only one of the elements in the list of illegitimate activities that can cause damage to the health of patients and the profitability of legitimate businesses who participate in the U.S. pharma supply chain. I include the following activities in that list:

  • Counterfeiting
  • Diversion
  • Theft
  • Tampering
  • Up-labeling

These activities have all been detected from time to time in the U.S. supply chain for quite a few years, but the frequency of some of them has been on the increase over that same period of time. The question is, how much of each activity should we, as a society, tolerate before we step up counter-measures that are targeted directly on one or more of them?

THE RISE OF PHARMACEUTICAL CARGO THEFT

Over the last 18 months the U.S. has experienced an unprecedented rise in the value of drugs stolen in thefts of entire truckloads as they are being transported from point to point (also see this). I’ve heard lots of theories about who is behind it (organized criminals/gangs, of course) and where the product ends up (outside the U.S., most people think). Continue reading How to Stop Pharmaceutical Cargo Theft