Community › Forums › Legal Advice India › I think I may have come across an illegal medicine racket. What to do?
- This topic has 11 replies, 9 voices, and was last updated 1 year, 3 months ago by
Calmrina8655.
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CCalmrina8655
PARTICIPANT
March 25, 2025 at 11:19 amMy mother buys medicines from a government dispensary. The following sequence has happened 4-5 times in the last few months:1. She shows the prescription and her card and asks for the medicine. The employee gives her a medicine of a different name. She asks if this is the same medicine and he replies yes, this is the same medicine but from a different brand. Everything is legit until this point.
2. She comes home. My sibling is a medical student. She checks the medicine and often finds that a completely different medicine is given, that is, a multivitamin is given for an antibiotic. Also, in the receipt, the medicine is neither a multivitamin nor an antibiotic but something else entirely.
When she was handed the wrong medicine again today, she aggressively argued with the employee that it is not the correct medicine but he didn’t give the correct medicine and said, don’t argue in things you’re not educated in, I know what I’m selling etc. This forces us to buy the correct medicine from the market, while we get free medicine in the dispensary.
I don’t have any proof but my intuition tells me that they are writing off the medicine in our receipt, which they are actually selling in the black market. This must amount to lacs of rupees a month. Not to mention that they may write off opioids like this too and contribute to illegal drugs market. This all on top of people’s health becoming worse, most people there are not much educated and thus never question the employee. What to do in this situation?
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MMegaprashant4593
PARTICIPANT
March 25, 2025 at 11:38 amYep its a racket. Report it. if the pharmacist gives a different medicine – you can check it using drug databases like CIMS / MIMS. Show him that its not the same or similar formulation or ask him to put a note in his handwriting that he is giving you drug B instead of Drug A. That way at least you have some record of incorrect dispensing.-
CCalmrina8655
OP
March 25, 2025 at 4:32 pmI’ll keep this in mind next time. thank you.
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PProseeker9377
PARTICIPANT
March 25, 2025 at 11:43 amMention the dispensary name and location as specifically as you can. And all upvote the post as much as you can so it gets popular and donβt give out your personal details on reddit so you could be tracked.This is a serious issue. Life saving medication is probably being taken away (stolen) from the needy and sold illegally for profit by those employees/ involved. Make this post popular but keep yourself safe as well. These guys could be dangerous or not.
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CCalmrina8655
OP
March 25, 2025 at 2:32 pmWell maybe I should have made this post like 5 days later, as they would definitely remember the argument today and identify us. Maybe give a media company a tip, to run a sting operation or something.
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FFiercesarika5745
PARTICIPANT
March 25, 2025 at 2:26 pmDifferent brands but same composition often for cheaper price. You should verify it online before confirming purchase if pharmacist is suggesting different brand. Probably the pharmacist is new or messed up.-
CCalmrina8655
OP
March 25, 2025 at 4:31 pmDifferent brand was not really an issue as I’m getting it for free in the dispensary anyway. The problem is them not giving the correct composition medicine. -
DDesisaurabh1629
PARTICIPANT
March 26, 2025 at 5:47 amRead the full post, it literally says multivitamins are being given instead of antibiotics which could be fatal, itβs an illegal racket the pharmacist is a criminal.
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CCalmutkarsh2814
PARTICIPANT
March 25, 2025 at 4:42 pmIf this is happening in Delhi, let me know. -
SSilentshark3782
PARTICIPANT
March 25, 2025 at 5:55 pmYou don’t need to be a pharmacist or a doctor for this. Look up the generic name of what was prescribed (usually a longer name, sometimes with two words, you can Google this) and look up the generic name for what is being given to you (you can find this behind the packaging, usually mentioned under composition). If it doesn’t match, specifically ask the pharmacist that you need the <generic name>.You can try tipping off local journalists or news outlets that seem trustworthy. Or file a complaint (not sure where).
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SSmartwolf9059
PARTICIPANT
March 26, 2025 at 3:25 amCan you share what was Β in prescription Β and which medication they gave ? -
AAlphahawk2615
PARTICIPANT
March 26, 2025 at 1:46 pmPost about the incident on X/twitter. Mention the medicine you asked for, the medicine they gave, the shops name and adress etc and tag local news channels, Google the licencing authority for those pharmacy and tag them in the post as well.
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