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Regular-article-logo Tuesday, 16 April 2024

Maharashtra won't allow 'spurious' medicine sale: Anil Deshmukh on Patanjali's Covid cure

State home minister says an offence will be registered if the company tries to sell the product

PTI Mumbai Published 25.06.20, 02:39 PM
Hours after the launch of Coronil on Tuesday, the ayush ministry had asked the firm to provide the details, telling it to stop advertising it till the issue is examined.

Hours after the launch of Coronil on Tuesday, the ayush ministry had asked the firm to provide the details, telling it to stop advertising it till the issue is examined. PTI

Amid the ongoing controversy over Ramdev's company Patanjali Ayurveda introducing a "cure" for coronavirus infection, Maharashtra home minister Anil Deshmukh on Thursday warned the yoga guru that the state government won't allow sale of 'spurious' medicines.

Patanjali Ayurveda, while presenting the Coronil medicine on Tuesday had claimed that it has found a cure for coronavirus infection.

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"The National Institute of Medical Sciences, Jaipur will find out whether clinical trials of @PypAyurved's 'Coronil' were done at all. An abundant warning to @yogrishiramdev that Maharashtra won't allow sale of spurious medicines. #MaharashtraGovtCares #NoPlayingWithLives," the minister tweeted.

Speaking to reporters later, Deshmukh said the Union ayush ministry has not allowed the company to sell the product as the firm has not conducted clinical trials.

"Complaints have been made in several states against their (Patanjali) advertisement (that the medicine cures Covid-19) when there has been no permission in the first place from the ministry or the Indian Council of Medical Science," he said.

"An offence will be registered against them if they try to sell the medicine in Maharashtra or advertise that Covid-19 can be cured with it," Deshmukh said.

Hours after the launch of Coronil on Tuesday, the ayush ministry had asked the firm to provide the details, telling it to stop advertising it till the issue is examined.

At the launch, the company had claimed that its medicine can cure the contagious disease within seven days.

It said Coronil, taken along with another product developed by it, had shown a 100 per cent success rate in clinical trials on infected patients, except those on life support.

Ramdev had said the medicines were developed by Patanjali Research Center, Haridwar, in association with privately-owned National Institute of Medical Science, Jaipur.

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