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WHO calls out gap in India's cough syrup testing after deaths

The children died in India over the past month after consuming cough medicine containing toxic diethylene glycol in quantities nearly 500 times the permissible limit

October 09, 2025 / 12:41 IST
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The World Health Organization told Reuters it had received confirmation from India on Wednesday that three contaminated syrups had been identified, and none had been exported. Reuters
The World Health Organization told Reuters it had received confirmation from India on Wednesday that three contaminated syrups had been identified, and none had been exported. Reuters

Indian authorities advised the public to avoid two more brands of cough syrup on Wednesday following the deaths of 17 children aged under five linked to a toxic ingredient, as the World Health Organization said the country had a "regulatory gap" in screening locally-sold syrup medicines.

The children died in India over the past month after consuming cough medicine containing toxic diethylene glycol in quantities nearly 500 times the permissible limit, officials say. The deaths were all linked to the Coldrif medicine, banned after a test confirmed the presence of the chemical on October 2.

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The Respifresh and RELIFE syrups also contain diethylene glycol, according to a public alert by Gujarat and other states on Wednesday that described it as "a toxic chemical that can cause serious poisoning, including kidney failure, neurological complications and even death, especially among children".

The World Health Organization told Reuters it had received confirmation from India on Wednesday that three contaminated syrups had been identified, and none had been exported.