The National Agency for Food and Drug Administration and Control (NAFDAC) is a Nigerian federal agency under the Federal Ministry of Health that is responsible for regulating and controlling the manufacture, importation, exportation, advertisement, distribution, sale, and use of food, drugs, cosmetics, medical devices, chemicals, and packaged water.[1][2]
The agency is headed by Mojisola Adeyeye, who was appointed in 2017 by the President of the Federal Republic of Nigeria as the director-general. She completed her five-year term on 2 November 2022 and was reappointed for a second term on 1 December 2022.[3][4]
Formation
The organisation was established to counter illicit and counterfeit products in Nigeria in 1993 under the country's health and safety law. Adulterated and counterfeit drugs are a problem in Nigeria. In one 1989 incident, over 150 children died as a result of paracetamol syrup containing diethylene glycol. The problem of fake drugs was so severe that neighbouring countries such as Ghana and Sierra Leone officially banned the sale of drugs, foods, and beverage products made in Nigeria.[citation needed]
Such problems led to the establishment of NAFDAC, with the goal of eliminating counterfeit pharmaceuticals, foods, and beverages products that are not manufactured in Nigeria and ensuring that available medications are safe and effective.
In December 1992, NAFDAC's first governing council was formed. The council was chaired by Tanimu Saulawa. In January 1993, supporting legislation was approved as Legislative Decree No. 15 of 1993. On 1 January 1994, NAFDAC was officially established as a parastatal of the federal ministry of health.[6]
NAFDAC replaced an earlier federal ministry of health body, the Directorate of Food and Drug Administration and Control, which had been deemed ineffective, partially because of a lack of laws concerning fake drugs.
Administration
Chairman and council
The NAFDAC governing council is chaired by a chairman appointed by the president on the recommendation of the minister of health. The council members include:[7]
Representative of the Pharmaceutical Manufacturing Group of Manufacturers Association of Nigeria
Representative of the Food and Beverage Group of Manufacturers Association of Nigeria.
Three people from the general public are also represented on the council.
NAFDAC is divided into 20 directorates and several units, including:[8]
The legal unit, charged with offering legal advice on "law arising from employee-employer relationships and is the custodian of legal documents and all agreements relating to the agency."
The public relations unit, headed by the director-general's office. Its main function is to inform, sensitize, enlighten, and create awareness concerning the role of the agency. The agency is divided into eight directorates.
Internal audit that provides a means of measuring the effectiveness of the system of internal control and accounting and carries out special investigations.
Functions
NAFDAC has various basic functions.[8] According to the requirements of its enabling decree, the agency was authorised to:
Regulate and control the importation, exportation, manufacture, advertisement, distribution, sale, and use of drugs, cosmetics, medical devices, packaged water, and chemicals
Conduct appropriate tests and ensure compliance with standard specifications designated and approved by the council for the effective control of the quality of food, drugs, cosmetics, medical devices, packaged water, and chemicals.
Undertake appropriate investigation into the production premises and raw materials for food, drugs, cosmetics, medical devices, bottled water, and chemicals, and establish a relevant quality assurance system, including certification of the production sites and of the regulated products.
Undertake inspection of imported foods, drugs, cosmetics, medical devices, bottled water, and chemicals and establish a relevant quality assurance system, including certification of the production sites and of the regulated products.
Compile standard specifications, regulations, and guidelines for the production, importation, exportation, sale, and distribution of food, drugs, cosmetics, medical devices, bottled water, and chemicals.
Undertake the registration of food, drugs, medical devices, bottled water, and chemicals.
Control the exportation and issue quality certification of food, drugs, medical devices, bottled water, and chemicals intended for export.
Establish and maintain relevant laboratories or other institutions in strategic areas of Nigeria as may be necessary for the performance of its functions.
NAFDAC envisions that by making these functions known, its actions will be apparent “in all sectors that deal with food, cosmetics, medical devices, bottled water, and chemicals to the extent of instilling the extra need for caution and compulsion to respect and obey existing regulations both for healthy living and knowledge of certain sanctions or default. Despite the establishment of NAFDAC, the sale and use of fake drugs did not end.
New amendments since 2001
Dissatisfied with progress in combating fake drugs, President Olusegun Obasanjo's administration dissolved the management of NAFDAC in August 2000. In April 2001, a new management, with Dora Akunyili as director-general, was inaugurated.[9] The team reorganised the agency, which has been successful in the recent past due to three new federal policies:
The outright ban on the importation of drugs and other regulated products through land borders.
Release of shipping and cargo manifests by the Nigerian Ports Authority, shipping lines, and airlines to NAFDAC inspectors.[9] For several years, Nigeria was drowned in an ocean of fake drugs. Then Dora Akunyili approached her job with zeal in order to rid the Nigerian drug market of fake drugs and contaminated water sold as "pure water."[10]
Controversies
The activities of NAFDAC have been the subject of considerable scrutiny in recent years. The agency has drawn fire for being susceptible to overt government interference, subject to bribery, internal feuding, and constant rumours and allegations abound concerning the misappropriation of funds. In one high-profile (and typical) case, the former NAFDAC director of finance and accounts, Andrew Ademola Mogbojuri, alleged mass fraud in 2015 against the agency's director-general, Paul Orhii.[11] The agency claimed sour grapes were behind the allegation and labelled Mogbojuri's claim "misleading and cheap blackmail."
Orhii was also the subject of a sweeping fraud allegation by NAFDAC whistleblowers earlier in 2015. A petition was sent to Nigerian President Muhammadu Buhari, alleging frivolous contract awards and supplies, manipulated publicity efforts, donations, and international air travel racketeering.[12]
Some of the world's largest brewers have been caught up in NAFDAC scandals as well. From a 2013 report alleging bribery conducted by Guinness and Heineken:
NAFDAC ensures it maintains very close contact with a number of national and international organisations whose activities relate to its functions. Such organisations include the following.[16]
National Association of Road Transport Owners (NARTO)
In order to keep in touch with the international scene for information, training, cooperation assistance, aid, and financing of specific projects, especially in these days of global and national austerity, the agency maintains close relationships with a number of international agencies, some of which include:
RxNigeria.comArchived 2016-04-16 at the Wayback Machine - An online database of pharmaceuticals and allied products approved for use in Nigeria by NAFDAC.