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RINGASKIDDY: Source of the little blue diamond opens its doors
to the media; impotence drug Viagra; Dispatch
October 3, 1998
Ringaskiddy, a tiny village in County Cork, is a major ferry-port providing
access to mainland Europe and Wales. Cruise liners stop here so that passengers
can shop in nearby Cork City or visit Blarney to kiss its famous stone.
Until last spring, Ringaskiddy was simply a place to pass through.
But now visitors gawk and talk about one of its major industries- the
Pfizer factory, dubbed Fortress Viagra. Here, the key ingredient for every
blue Viagra tablet is made. Sildenafil citrate, the powdered base for the
"Pfizer Riser", is shipped in blue barrels from Ringaskiddy to
Pfizer plants in France, the USA, and Puerto Rico where it is made into
tablets. The demand is so great for the little blue diamonds that 1400
kg of sildenafil citrate are shipped every week. Each 25 kg drum contains
enough chemical to cause 5000 erections.
The company, which was forbidden to say anything publicly about Viagra
in Europe until the drug gained European approval, told visiting journalists
last week that the checks and balances in dispensing should stop Viagra
becoming a black market recreational drug. However, the visitors' main
preoccupation seemed to be that the production manager at Fortress Pfizer
is a woman, and that the locals know all the Viagra jokes.
But Viagra is no joke to the Irish economy. Record sales have contributed
to a huge rise in the export of organic chemicals from Ireland. And Pfizer
expects to invest US$ 300 million over the next 4 years on more production
capacity, with 100 extra workers predicted to join the 320-strong Ringaskiddy
workforce. However, the success of the blue diamond has also cost 250 jobs.
Vivus announced the cancellation last week of its plans to build a factory
in Ireland to handle its impotence drug MUSE because patients would rather
take a tablet than inject alprostadil into the urethra.
Copyright 1998 Information Access Company, a Thomson Corporation Company;
ASAP Copyright 1998 Lancet Ltd. The Lancet
SECTION: Pg. 1127; ISSN: 0099-5355
IAC-ACC-NO: 53134522
LENGTH: 310 words
BYLINE: Birchard, Karen
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