City
Epaper

12 more Delhi medicine shops shut for flouting Covid drug norms

By IANS | Updated: June 2, 2021 23:10 IST

New Delhi, June 2 The licences of more 12 medicine shops in the city were suspended on Wednesday ...

Open in App

New Delhi, June 2 The licences of more 12 medicine shops in the city were suspended on Wednesday for selling Covid management drugs without a doctor's prescription, a week after 25 chemist shops were shut for the same reason, Delhi government sources said.

The development is the part of action being taken in the wake of a rising number of mucormycosis (black fungus) cases in the national capital. There have been regular alarms from experts, who blame the indiscriminate use of steroids among Covid patients for the spike in black fungus cases.

The Delhi Disaster Management Authority had on May 22 also directed the pharmacies in the national capital selling Covid medicines to display the available stocks and rates of drugs prominently at their shops.

Disclaimer: This post has been auto-published from an agency feed without any modifications to the text and has not been reviewed by an editor

Tags: Delhi disaster management authority
Open in App

Related Stories

NationalDelhi LG chairs meeting of DDMA over flood situation in national capital

PoliticsPM Modi calls Delhi Lt Governor to inquire about flood situation

NationalSchools, colleges to remain shut till Sunday, Govt offices will have WFH: Delhi CM Kejriwal after DDMA meeting

NationalDelhi flood: Schools, colleges to remain shut till Sunday

NationalDelhi LG calls DDMA meeting over rising water level of Yamuna

Health Realted Stories

HealthScientists find cellular culprit behind age-related abdominal fat

HealthArmy Hospital performs its first minimally invasive glaucoma surgery

HealthScreening for both active and dormant TB infection key to improve detection: Study

HealthMinister Ashish Sood outlines plan to make Delhi a 'credible medical destination'

HealthIndia reduced poverty levels with targeted welfare schemes, economic reforms: World Bank