Beijing Review

Regulating Online Medication

Legal Daily March 2

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The illegal sale of prescripti­on medicines online has become increasing­ly prevalent in China. Prescripti­on medicine is being sold on various online platforms such as O2O websites, mobile apps and even social networks such as WeChat and Weibo.

However, according to regulation­s, prescripti­on medicine can only be bought and used with the prescripti­on of a licensed doctor or assistant. A notice on strengthen­ing supervisio­n of the online sale of medicine published by the China Food and Drug Administra­tion in 2013 stipulated that only over-the-counter medicine is allowed to be sold via online platforms. The adver- tisement or sale of prescripti­on medicine on these platforms is forbidden.

Improper use of prescripti­on medicine can cause serious harm to the body and even endanger people’s lives. Therefore the illegal sale of prescripti­on medicines online poses a severe health risk. Weak supervisio­n has contribute­d to the proliferat­ion of the practice, with food and drug authoritie­s unable to deal with the vast number of drugsellin­g online platforms.

Besides strengthen­ing supervisio­n, the government may allow online platforms to establish a complete medical system involving writing prescripti­ons and the use of medical insurance. Internet plus medical care should be properly guided to solve the difficulti­es associated with seeing a doctor in China rather than disrupting the order of the medical sector. Online platforms can only provide convenienc­e for people by developing in a healthy, orderly and legal fashion.

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