Saturday, April 27, 2024
News

Wockhardt at the forefront of UK vaccination: Report

   SocialTwist Tell-a-Friend    Print this Page   COMMENT

New Delhi | Monday, 2021 3:15:06 AM IST
The race to vaccinate Britain has also offered a shot at redemption for Wockhardt, a once high-flying Indian pharmaceutical company that was investigated by US regulators over failings at its plants, Financial Times reported.

The group now has a critical role in delivering the jab to millions. A Wockhardt-owned plant in the Welsh town of Wrexham is responsible for putting the vaccine in vials and packaging it for dispatch to the UK regulator for inspection, the report said.

The report said although Wockhardt has supplied medicines to the UK's NHS for many years, the biggest vaccination programme in the country's history brings a new degree of pressure for a company whose halcyon days were in the 2000s.

The company's international expansion took it into the UK in 1998, when it acquired Wallis Laboratories. Five years later, the group bought CP Pharmaceuticals in Wrexham. Its presence is now paying off, with Wockhardt part of a consortium, including Oxford BioMedica and Cobra Biologics, tasked with helping the UK government meet its ambitious goal of vaccinating 2 million people a week.

Under the contract, the Wrexham plant will fill vials with the vaccine and then package them for 18 months. The site, which on Wednesday successfully battled the threat of floodwater after heavy rain, has previously manufactured a range of treatments for diabetes, anticoagulation and pain management that are sold in vials, cartridges and ampoules, Financial Times said.

Habil Khorakiwala, Wockhardt's chairman, hailed a "huge sense of purpose and pride", after the UK government awarded the group the contract in August. On a visit to the plant in November, Prime Minister Boris Johnson declared that it could offer "salvation for humanity".

Khorakiwala told Financial Times that the company was selected because of its long record in the UK and that its Wrexham plant had capacity available. "We are a major supplier of injectables to the UK government for the last many years," Khorakiwala said.

"We were one of the companies they evaluated, we had capacity, they reserved a certain facility with us." The 78-year-old entrepreneur added that Wockhardt, which supplies antibiotics and other products to the NHS, has "committed to supply whatever they need up to about 200m doses per year". The plant is handling the Oxford/AstraZeneca vaccine.

The Wockhardt Chairman said he was also exploring vaccine distribution and marketing opportunities in the company's home market, as per the report.

--IANS san/vd

( 411 Words)

2021-01-24-21:02:01 (IANS)

 
  LATEST COMMENTS (0)
POST YOUR COMMENT
Comments Not Available
 
POST YOUR COMMENT
 
 
TRENDING TOPICS
 
 
CITY NEWS
MORE CITIES
 
 
 
MORE HEALTH NEWS
Researchers find how low intensity exerc...
Researchers find new treatment path for ...
Researchers discover new metric for diag...
Do you know immunotherapy post-surgery i...
Study gives more insight into molecular ...
Researchers reveal impact of aldehydes o...
More...
 
INDIA WORLD ASIA
'Competing for appeasement, vote bank': ...
'Do not get swayed by any diversionary t...
Punjab police arrest 11 members of gangs...
Lok Sabha 2024 polls: Karnataka Dy CM Sh...
'Will this country run on Sharia?' Union...
HD Kumaraswamy levels coupons for vote c...
More...    
 
 Top Stories
DC Director of Cricket Sourav Gangu... 
Karnataka: Actor Darshan casts his ... 
Arctic University of Norway expands... 
PM Modi holds roadshow in Uttar Pra... 
Orissa High Court passes a landmark... 
Myanmar national arrested with hero... 
Maharashtra: Congress leader quits ... 
BJP is spreading false narrative ab...