Reference Text
Time Left10:00
The
Union
Health
Ministry's
ban
on
the
retail
sale
and
private
manufacture
of
oxytocin,
expected
to
kick
off
on
September
1,
is
an
extremely
ill-thought-out
one.
The
drug,
a
synthetic
version
of
a
human
hormone,
is
a
life-saver
for
women.
Doctors
use
it
to
induce
labour
in
pregnant
women
and
to
stem
postpartum
bleeding.
So
critical
is
its
role
in
maternal
health
that
the
World
Health
Organization
recommends
it
as
the
drug
of
choice
in
postpartum
haemorrhage.
The
government's
ban
ignores
this,
and
is
motivated
instead
by
the
misuse
of
the
hormone
in
the
dairy
industry.
Because
oxytocin
stimulates
lactation
in
cattle,
dairy
farmers
inject
the
drug
indiscriminately
to
increase
milk
production.
This
has
spawned
several
unlicensed
facilities
that
manufacture
the
drug
for
veterinary
use.
It
is
a
problem
that
needs
solving.
But
the
right
approach
would
have
been
to
strengthen
regulation,
and
crack
down
on
illegal
production.
Much
is
unknown
about
the
ill-effects
of
oxytocin
on
cattle.
One
of
the
concerns
was
that
oxytocin
leads
to
infertility
in
dairy
animals,
and
some
studies
show
this
to
be
true.
It
has
also
been
linked
to
mastitis,
a
painful
inflammation
of
the
udder.
Milk
consumers
worry
about
exposure
to
it
through
dairy
products.
The
science
behind
some
of
these
claims
is
unclear.
In
a
Lok
Sabha
answer
in
2015,
the
National
Dairy
Research
Institute
was
quoted
as
saying
there
was
no
evidence
that
oxytocin
led
to
infertility.
A
2014
study
by
researchers
at
the
National
Institute
of
Nutrition
concluded
that
oxytocin
content
in
buffalo
milk
did
not
alter
with
injections.
However,
even
if
the
ill-effects
of
oxytocin
are
real,
a
ban
is
not
the
answer.
Oxytocin
is
simply
too
important
to
Indian
women,
45,000
of
whom
die
due
to
causes
related
to
childbirth
each
year.
A
parallel
to
the
situation
lies
in
the
misuse
of
antibiotics
in
humans
and
poultry.
So
heavily
are
these
drugs
used
that
they
are
causing
deadly
bacteria
to
become
resistant
to
them.
Yet,
despite
calls
for
a
complete
ban
on
over-the-counter
sale
of
antibiotics,
India
has
been
reluctant
to
do
so.
In
much
of
rural
India,
more
people
still
die
due
to
a
lack
of
antibiotics
than
due
to
antibiotic-resistance.
This
has
swung
the
cost-benefit
ratio
against
outright
bans.
In
oxytocin's
case,
if
only
a
single
public
sector
unit
manufactures
the
drug,
as
the
government
plans,
this
could
lead
to
drug
shortages
and
price
hikes.
Karnataka
Antibiotics
&
Pharmaceuticals
Limited,
the
drugmaker
tasked
with
manufacturing
oxytocin,
has
been
asked
to
cap
the
price
at
16.56
for
1ml
of
a
five
international
unit
(IU)
solution.
However,
some
private
manufacturers
were
selling
it
for
₹4
until
now.
Monopolising
production
will
remove
the
low-price
options
from
the
market.
Such