Sierra Leone closes clinics accused of giving fake drugs
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FREETOWN (AFP) — Sierra Leone has shut down a group of clinics run by Egyptian doctors for allegedly administering fake drugs as part of crackdown on illegal practices in the health sector, officials said Wednesday.
“We investigated after receiving a number of complaints from patients being given fake drugs and sub-standard injections for the treatment of typhoid in at least nine clinics run by the Egyptians,” said Alimamy Turay of the Sierra Leone Pharmacy Board.
At least four patients complained of feeling dizzy and had to seek medical relief elsewhere, he added.
On Tuesday, the health minister announced a crackdown on fake and unregistered foreign doctors operating in Sierra Leone, estimated to number around 200.
Sierra Leone is struggling to recover from a bloody, decade-long civil war which ended in 2001. An estimated 120,000 people were killed and thousands had their limbs hacked off by rebel fighters trying to overthrow the government.
The conflict left the health care system in tatters with less than one physician per 10,000 inhabitants, according to figures from the World Health Organisation.
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