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Senate Hearing on Coronavirus Crisis Exposes Dangers of US Drug Dependence on China Sourcing

WASHINGTON—Millions of Americans depend on drugs that are made in part or wholly in China because U…

WASHINGTON—Millions of Americans depend on drugs that are made in part or wholly in China because U.S. manufacturers moved their supply chains and much of their manufacturing facilities to that country, the Senate Committee on Small Business and Entrepreneurship was told Thursday.

“Thousands of our generic drugs and even some of the brand name products and perhaps even new therapies for coronavirus may depend on the chemicals that are sourced primarily in China,” Rosemary Gibson, a senior adviser to the Garrison, New York-based Hastings Center Bioethics Research Institute, told the committee.

The hearings focus was on “Coronavirus and Americas small business supply chain.”

Gibson was responding to Sen. Josh Hawley (R-Mo.), who asked “how many of our drugs involve Chinese production. Maybe theyre not made wholly there but Chinese production is involved?”

Gibson continued, saying “if you are hospitalized with coronavirus, if you have a severe case, which thankfully are small numbers, you might need a ventilator. You will need sedatives like Fentanyl and Propofol.

“Your blood pressure may get dangerously low, so you will need pressers like Dopamine and Epinephrine. You might get a secondary infection that is bacterial in nature and you will need antibiotics. You might become septic, which is life-threatening.”

Gibson told the committee that she was recently “sitting in a room with the people that actually make medicines. These are the men and women in pharmaceutical engineering and pharmaceutical chemistry.

“I said, So tell me, if you have to make these tomorrow, where do the core chemicals come from to make it? How much are we dependent on China? They said 90 percent of the chemicals to make those basic generic drugs depend on China.”

Earlier this month, after the U.S. restricted travel to and from China, Xinhua, Chinas state-controlled official news agency, warned that, “these practices [restricting travel from China to the United States] in the United States are very unkind. They can be described as falling into the ground and killing people while they are ill.”

The Chinese news agency then added ominously that, “If China retaliates against the U.S. at this time, in addition to announcing a travel ban on the United States, it will also announce strategic control over medical products and ban exports to the United States.”

Politico reported in December that “last year, China accounted for 95 percent of U.S. imports of ibuprofen, 91 percent of U.S. imports of hydrocortisone, 70 percent of U.S. imports of acetaminophen, 40 to 45 percent of U.S. imports of penicillin and 40 percent of U.S. imports of heparin, according to Commerce Department data. In all, 80 percent of the U.S. supply of antibiotics are made in China.”

The situation is not totally hopeless, however, because, Gibson said, “the good news is there is advanced manufacturing technology and really brilliant chemists right here in the United States that want to make it capable of starting production tomorrow.”

In her prepared testimony, Gibson described the national security risks involved in U.S. dependence on Chinese drug production if Beijing follows through on the threat published by Xinhua.

“The unleashing of this threat will cause unprecedented deaths and social disorder on a scale never seen before on our country. The civilian and military health care systems will collapse. China can wreak other havoc. Medicines in the hands of an adversary can be weaponized,” Gibson testified.

“Medicines can be made with lethal contaminants or sold without any real medicine in them, renderingRead More – Source
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