Audio By Carbonatix
The Food and Drugs Authority (FDA) last December seized about one metric tonne of expired products from the open market, supermarkets, marts and pharmacy shops in the New Juaben Municipality.
The products seized included drugs, body creams, soft and hard drinks, food products such as corned beef, tin tomatoes, mayonnaise and salad creams through an operation by the FDA to protect the safety of consumers during the festive period.
The Regional Director of the FDA, Mr Samuel Kwakye, who disclosed this to the GNA in an interview, said expired products were very dangerous to human consumption in that once the valid date was over some harmful substances were introduced into the products which ultimately could pose great danger to the human body.
He said interestingly some big shops, supermarkets and pharmacies, which were perceived to know better, were also found to have expired products on their shelves and advised the general public to be conscious of the expiry dates and other information on products for their safety.
Mr Kwakye said because of the grave danger that expired goods could pose to the human system, it was important for that information to be taken seriously and urged the public to check for the expiry dates before purchasing any food product or drug.
According to the Regional Director, apart from the expired goods, some products may have their standards compromised due to storage and handling or exposure to certain weather conditions, especially the sunlight, and urged the public not to buy products displayed in the sun.
He explained that the indications on food and drug products were not mere formalities but were arrived at after studies were conducted into the ingredients and chemical compositions of the products to ensure that the allowable chemicals and components were not harmful to humans.
Mr Kwakye said the FDA was poised to ensure the safety of all drugs and food for public consumption and, therefore, as part of its operational activities, conducted routine monitoring at the markets and pharmacy shops in line with its mandate.
He noted that this year his outfit would focus on education and sensitisation of the public on the safety and standards of products and appealed to consumers to be alert and report any suspicious product; weather with fake information or unlabelled, to enable the Authority to take the appropriate action.
Latest Stories
-
Dubik Mahama defends ECG reforms as IMF pushes for greater private sector participation
38 minutes -
Government policies drove Ghana’s economic recovery, not IMF – Dr Nyarko Otoo
52 minutes -
IMF gains should not be celebrated yet – Kofi Bentil
1 hour -
Ghana still addicted IMF programmes that don’t promote production – Dr Nyarko Otoo
1 hour -
IMF exit marks end of painful economic chapter – Dr. Theo Acheampong
2 hours -
Franklin Cudjoe: Mahama gov’t delivered Ghana’s fastest economic recovery
2 hours -
Ghana paid high price for delayed IMF programme – Prof Bokpin
2 hours -
Government commits to fully recapitalising Bank of Ghana by 2032Â
2 hours -
The football culture: lost or simply changed?
2 hours -
African Athletics Championships: Ghana’s women’s relay team makes history with bronze medal
3 hours -
Ghana must seize hard-won fiscal space to drive growth, jobs – IMFÂ
3 hours -
Black Queens’ Mary Amponsah donates to lower division side Blacoe Soccer Queens
3 hours -
10 miners rescued after pit collapse at Konongo mining site
3 hours -
Blue Water Guards improve water quality as 452 new recruits graduate at Ezinlibo
4 hours -
“Don’t let power intoxicate you” – Kojo Adu Asare fires warning to “wicked” appointees
5 hours