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Medical device packaging takes center stage in New York

Johnson & Johnson executive addresses the growing sophistication of counterfeiters; operating room nurses evaluate medical device packaging.

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“Don’t fall back on your anti-counterfeiting efforts in a down economy; counterfeiters love this economy,” says David S. Howard, and he should know. He’s director of product protection for Johnson & Johnson, a marketer of numerous consumer, medical device and diagnostic, and pharmaceutical products and brands whose market share ranks first or second. As a result, the higher margins and volumes of these products and brands make them more susceptible to counterfeiting.

Howard offered the advice during his presentation at the June 9 Medical Device Packaging Update during MD&M East in New York. During his speech, “Securing Medical Device Brand Image and Product Integrity Using the Latest Packaging Materials and Technologies,” Howard delivered the following points:

• Counterfeiters continue to grow in sophistication. J&J found evidence of this when it uncovered counterfeit product in Vietnam. Howard said the blister package materials in the counterfeit packaging “were superior to our own.” He noted that financial gain continues to motivate organized crime to become more actively involved in counterfeiting.
• Concerned that counterfeiters may be buying legitimate packaging machinery for illegal purposes, Howard questioned if machinery manufacturers qualify the companies purchasing their equipment, or do they consider every sale a good sale? • Another evasive tack being taken by counterfeiters, he pointed out, is that they operate more frequently on a “hit-and-run” basis, working in smaller quantities so that by the time a company or organization is on their trail, they’re long gone.
• Technology is an enabler, not a solution. No single technology can assure a product will not be counterfeited. Layers must be utilized and features must be changed. Stay nimble. No technology should be deployed that cannot be updated at a moment’s notice.
• It’s not necessarily wise to share information on your Web site touting that you’ve found counterfeit product. Counterfeiters read your Web site and can learn valuable details to avoid future detection.
• Counterfeiters typically employ a black light as a way to look for anti-counterfeit measures on or in a package.

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