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Description: pexels-photo-163944.jpegCounterfeit Drugs, Genuine Solutions!

Fake medications still remain the topmost concern in the global pharmaceutical industry. Currently, in the intricate global economy, augmentation of online transactions and complex pharmaceutical supply chains has made it even more difficult to detect such counterfeit drugs.

The pharmaceutical industry is battling simultaneously against counterfeit drugs thriving online, and also in hospitals and pharmacies. These counterfeit drugs not only affect the reputation of the drug manufacturers and cause sales loss, but they are very much dangerous to our health too.The Imitation Spoon Is Full!

Description: 485195897.jpgAlthough, the magnitude of India’s counterfeit drugs industry is still unknown, but what is definite is that the situation needs immediate intervention and proper resources to stop such practices.

Presently, India has only around 1,200 drug inspectors to oversee the drug manufacturing companies that number somewhere amongst 6,000 and 15,000.

The good news is that; today, the industry is steadfast to control the problem of law enforcement; international organizations, pharmaceutical executives, and policymakers are employing a number of strong and effective strategies that are decreasing and curbing the extent of counterfeit drugs that move into users’ homes.

The following anti-counterfeit strategies are quite prevalent these days: 

1. Holograms
Holograms can integrate three-layered safety features and become the most potent defense against faking. Holograms can offer apparent first-line validation with hidden features like micro text, UV-sensitive, scrambled images, or other dedicated inks that provide next line substantiation for trained inspectors and proper decrypting tools.

2. Tamper-Resistant Packing
The drug packaging is having a barrier for the entry or there is an indicator; which, if ruptured or absent, would offer audible or visible evidence to customers that tampering or meddling has occurred. For example, shrinkable bands and seals, breakable caps, film wrappers, blister packs, tape seals, etc.

3. Global Trade Item Number (GTIN)
In this method, a 14/13/12/8 numerically unique identification code is allocated by the manufacturer according to the GS1 allocation rules for products, or services, or trade items. It is created from a prefix from the name of the company allotted by GS1, a check digit, and an item reference number entitled by the company.

4. Serialized Global Trade Item Number (sGTIN)
This process includes creating a unique identification number to classify a specific product, by affixing a serial number to the GTIN of the item.

5. Pedigree
This is a kind of track and trace technology. It is an electronic file or a paper document that archives the particulars of circulation of a prescription drug from the manufacturer via wholesale dealings, till it is received by the distributor, which is generally a physician or a pharmacist. The individual receiving a pedigree together with the drug consignment must validate that every documented distribution took place and that the information related to the drug specification like manufacturing date and lot number is accurate. This system is intended to ascertain that prescription drugs cannot be side-tracked or substituted easily with counterfeit drugs.

6. Mass Serialization
This comprises the procedures of producing, coding, and authenticating the unique identity of individual drugs. Without this, the legitimacy and authenticity of the pedigree link only to the lot number comprising thousands of bottles. When serialization is united with track and trace method, it assists in the tracking of drugs through the supply chain and permits for planned identification of drugs for withdrawal.

7. Data Carriers
These are graphical structures used to communicate the drug identifiers and related information in the system and/or human decipherable format. A tag, label, or mark, applied at the production base depicts them. Computer decipherable formats comprise two dimensional (2D), linear barcodes and radio frequency identifier (RFID) tags.

Drug counterfeiting is a vital problem addressed by a number of countries. And the unfortunate truth is that counterfeiting drugs are hard to eradicate, and the popularity of the e-commerce and internet too are posing new challenges and threats to the drug manufacturers and governing authorities. Although the figures will differ, WHO assesses that almost 10% of all drugs are counterfeit.

But the good news is that the whole industry continues to work collaboratively and make prodigious progressions in restricting the problem. Profounder partnerships augmented co-operation, and more sharing of the resource will assist in keeping the patients safe and the fakers behind the bars. The government has become more and more proactive in stopping counterfeiting.

The Indian drug controller general has recommended a modification of the Drugs and Cosmetics Act requiring that every single drug manufacturer in the country should have a 2D barcode and a unique identification code and on the packaging, whereby, genuineness can be certified by text message. The state drug controllers are conducting surprise inspections to check the quality of the drug on the monthly basis.

And in such inspections, samples are withdrawn from pharmacies, government hospitals, and wholesalers and appropriate actions under the drugs and Cosmetics Act, 1940, are taken against the manufacturers.

Recently, the Health Ministry has appointed 200 drug inspectors to keep a check, particularly on counterfeit medicines. To avoid penalties, cancellation of licenses, prosecutions under drugs and Cosmetics Act, 1940, and piracy of drugs, the manufacturers should adopt and implement new technologies and new initiatives.

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Combating Counterfeit Antibiotics-Packaging Innovations That Work in Tier-2 and Rural Markets

Imagine a patient in a small town buying antibiotics with hope for recovery, only to later discover the medicine was fake. This isn’t just a business challenge; it’s a human crisis that threatens lives and erodes trust in healthcare.

According to the World Health Organization (WHO), about 1 in 10 medical products in low- and middle-income countries is substandard or falsified, with antibiotics among the most commonly counterfeited. In India, this issue is especially severe in tier-2 and rural markets, where patients depend heavily on affordable medicines but have fewer tools to verify authenticity.

For domestic pharma companies with mass-market distribution, protecting these communities goes beyond compliance — it’s about safeguarding public health and protecting brand trust in the very markets where demand is highest.

Why Rural and Tier-2 Markets Face Bigger Risks

Medicines in rural areas often pass through long, complex distribution chains before reaching patients. With fewer regulatory checks, limited pharmacist training, and high demand for low-cost antibiotics, counterfeiters exploit every gap.

Why antibiotics?

  • They are the most prescribed medicines in rural India.
  • Counterfeit versions are easy to circulate undetected.
  • Fake or substandard antibiotics fuel antimicrobial resistance (AMR), making genuine treatments less effective.
The result: 
patients don’t recover, resistance spreads, and pharma brands lose credibility.

Practical Packaging Solutions That Work on the Ground

Domestic pharma leaders don’t need futuristic tech — simple, field-proven solutions can protect both patients and business in high-risk markets:

1. QR Codes for Instant Verification

With smartphone use now above 50% in tier-2 and rural India, secure QR codes allow patients and chemists to scan and confirm authenticity in seconds.

2. Scratch-to-Reveal Codes

A cost-effective feature where patients scratch a panel to uncover a one-time code, then send it via SMS for instant confirmation. Perfect for regions with poor internet but reliable mobile coverage.

3. Toll-Free Number Verification

For areas where smartphones are less common, patients can call a toll-free number, enter the pack code, and receive immediate confirmation.

4. Serialization & Track-and-Trace

For companies looking at scale, serialization (unique pack codes) with Track-and-Trace systems enables full supply chain visibility. While CDSCO already mandates serialization for exports, extending it domestically creates a powerful barrier against counterfeits.

Even the best packaging features work only if people know how to use them. Pharma companies can build trust by:

  • Printing clear calls-to-action on packs like “Scan to Verify” or “Scratch and SMS to Confirm.”
  • Training distributors, chemists, and field staff to explain features.
  • Partnering with health workers and pharmacist associations to promote safe buying practices.

What Pharma Companies Can Do Today

  • Adopt at least one low-cost anti-counterfeit feature suited to your market.
  • Train distributors and field teams to guide chemists on how to use these features.
  • Print simple instructions on every pack to drive patient adoption.
  • Monitor ground feedback and refine your packaging strategy over time.

Beyond Packaging: Partnerships Multiply Impact

Technology works best when paired with collaboration.

Pharma companies can:

  • Partner with local health workers to raise awareness.
  • Work with pharmacist associations to block counterfeit circulation.
  • Align with regulators like CDSCO — and globally with bodies like TGA and USFDA — to meet compliance while building consumer confidence.

Why Acting Now Matters

Counterfeiting in non-urban supply chains is no longer just a rural problem — it’s a nationwide risk. Ignoring it can result in regulatory challenges, lost market share, and, most importantly, lives lost.

By contrast, acting now with practical anti-counterfeit packaging creates an opportunity to:

  • Protect patients where they are most vulnerable.
  • Safeguard your brand in India’s fastest-growing pharma markets.
  • Position your company as a trusted healthcare partner at home and globally.
Because at the end of the day, packaging isn’t just about protecting a product — it’s about protecting people.

Moving Forward with Safer Packaging

At Lasersec Technologies, we help pharma companies design practical anti-counterfeit packaging solutions — from scratch panels and QR codes to serialization and Track & Trace.

Backed by compliance expertise and real-world field success, our goal is simple: to help you protect patients, build trust, and stay ahead of counterfeiters in both rural India and global markets.

Export-Ready Pharma Packaging- What Global Buyers Are Now Expecting

You’ve secured the order, production is complete, and your shipment is ready to move. But then, just before dispatch, your buyer asks:

“Does your packaging meet serialization and scan-based proof requirements?”

Imagine losing a million-dollar contract — not because of your medicine, but because your packaging failed to inspire trust. This is the reality many exporters face today. For global buyers, packaging has become the deciding factor between smooth delivery and a deal falling apart.

Why Packaging Standards Are Now Non-Negotiable

Global buyers are under pressure from regulators, distributors, and patients. They must ensure every product they source is traceable, authentic, and tamper-proof. That means export-ready packaging is no longer optional — it’s the foundation of international trade.

Key compliance must-haves include:

  • Track & Trace Systems – complete product visibility across the supply chain
  • Serialization – unique identifiers that meet global compliance norms
  • Tamper-Evident Features – seals or packaging that immediately reveal interference
  • Scan-Based Proof – QR codes or secure markings enabling instant authentication

Without these, buyers see risk — and in today’s market, risk means rejection. It’s not just about checking compliance boxes. Buyers want reassurance that:

  • Their shipments won’t face customs delays due to packaging gaps
  • They won’t be caught in regulatory disputes in importing countries
  • They can confidently show stakeholders a secure supply chain
For exporters, this transforms packaging into a proof of credibility. It’s no longer just a container — it’s part of your business reputation.

Regional Buyer Expectations: One Size Doesn’t Fit All

Every region enforces its own regulations. Understanding them isn’t just smart — it’s survival.

RegionKey Packaging ExpectationsWhat It Means for Exporters
European Union (EU)Strict serialization under the FMD (Falsified Medicines Directive) with database-driven verification.Packs must be registered and verifiable via EU hub. Non-compliant shipments are rejected at borders.
United StatesDSCSA (Drug Supply Chain Security Act) requires interoperability and traceability beyond serialization.Exporters must ensure their systems “talk” with US buyers’ systems for seamless data exchange.
Middle East & AfricaHigh counterfeit risks demand visible tamper-evidence + secure scan codes.Buyers expect seals and markings they can verify instantly at distributor level.

According to the WHO, 1 in 10 medical products in low- and middle-income countries is substandard or falsified — highlighting why MEA and APAC buyers demand extra layers of security.

Before shipping, ask yourself:

  • Does every pack carry a unique, scannable serialization code?
  • Is there a tamper-evident seal that cannot be replaced unnoticed?
  • Can my systems generate and share serialization data with buyers?
  • Do I have scan-based proof of authenticity ready for customs or audits?

If the answer is “no” to any of these, your packaging isn’t truly export-ready.

Indian pharma is globally respected for high-quality medicines. But as regulations tighten, packaging standards are becoming the new benchmark for trust.

Those who adapt quickly — with serialization, secure QR codes, and tamper-evident solutions — will stand out as reliable partners. On the other hand, exporters who delay risk losing contracts, not because of product quality, but because their packaging didn’t pass the credibility test.

Global buyers are no longer asking if your packaging is compliant — they’re asking how quickly you can prove it.

Export-ready packaging is now a business advantage, not just a compliance step. For exporters preparing to expand globally, investing in the right packaging solutions is no longer optional.

Because in today’s market, packaging isn’t just protecting your product — it’s protecting your growth.

At Lasersec Technologies, we partner with pharma exporters to ensure their packaging meets global serialization, traceability, and anti-counterfeit standards — helping you ship with confidence and win global trust.