Taiwanese health officials have urged the public to avoid bulk buying Panadol and sending it overseas, as pharmacy shelves across the island are being cleared of the medicine.
“We would like to remind everyone that they should buy drugs like Panadol only in moderation, according to their needs,” said Dr Victor Wang, head of the Central Epidemic Command Centre (CECC), who added that people have been purchasing it in large quantities until there is “almost none left” on store shelves.
The authorities have contacted the manufacturer to request an increase in supplies to meet demand, he added at a press conference on Monday.
While Wang did not mention China, it is believed that some customers have been sending boxes of medicine across the Taiwan Strait for friends and relatives who are currently facing a Covid-19 wave.
Some Taiwanese social media users say they know of people doing so.
“A Chinese wife living in my neighborhood has been buying a lot of Panadol to send back to her hometown,” a YouTube comment read.
Pharmacy shelves in Beijing have been emptied of antigen test kits, face masks and fever medication amid a surge of virus cases after China abruptly lifted its strict Covid-19 restrictions earlier in December.
In Taipei, three pharmacies that The Straits Times went to on Tuesday had run out of Panadol, although other brands of fever and flu medicine were still available.
Local pharmacist Wang Mei-yuan said customers prefer to buy Panadol because it is more well-known.