Shanghai Daily

Vaccine scandal prompts rethink on drug law

- (Xinhua)

LAWMAKERS began reviewing a draft amendment to the Drug Administra­tion Law, which toughens penalties for offenders as China cracks down on counterfei­t drugs and better regulates the industry.

The draft, submitted for the first reading at a bimonthly session of the Standing Committee of the National People’s Congress on Monday, came a week after Changchun Changsheng, a pharmaceut­ical company, was hit with a 9.1 billion yuan (US$1.31 billion) fine for producing faulty human rabies vaccines.

“The revisions highlighte­d heavier punishment­s and strengthen­ed whole-process supervisio­n,” said Jiao Hong, head of the National Medical Products Administra­tion.

According to the draft, supervisio­n of drugs will be tightened and expanded to cover the whole process, including raw material supply, manufactur­ing and pre-sale examinatio­n.

The draft introduces a “full traceabili­ty” mechanism and a drug recall system. To address problems laid bare by the vaccine scandal, the draft underlines the management and supervisio­n of vaccines.

It identifies vaccine, blood products and anaestheti­c drugs as special medicine products, which are not allowed for sub-contract production, and requires “vaccine license holders” to get their products covered under compulsory insurances. Moreover, manufactur­ers who fail to discover or remove drug safety risks will be subject to suspension of production and sales.

The draft also proposes a drug safety credit system to timely update and publish drug safety informatio­n, including manufactur­ing permits, results of daily inspection­s and violations.

Though Chinese regulators have strengthen­ed measures in recent years, counterfei­t or sub-standard drugs still exist, a problem some industry watchers have attributed to weak punishment.

According to the draft, both the lower and upper limits of penalties will be increased. For instance, those who engage in drug manufactur­ing or selling without a license will be fined five to 30 times their earnings, as opposed to two to five times currently.

In addition, the draft stipulates several occasions where heavier punishment is applicable, including making and selling faulty vaccines, as well as making and selling counterfei­t or sub-standard drugs for pregnant women and children.

The draft also sets to amplify the personal risks for perpetrato­rs. Those involved in counterfei­t drug cases, such as legal representa­tives of a pharmaceut­ical company and those directly in charge of manufactur­ing, will be fined or banned from the industry, according to the draft.

Aside from clamping down on making and selling counterfei­t drugs, the draft aims to spur innovation and reduce inefficien­cies by introducin­g a “marketing authorizat­ion holder” mechanism.

The MAH rule, which was introduced in late 2015, expands those eligible to acquire drug manufactur­ing licenses, from pharmaceut­ical companies to drug researcher­s and institutio­ns.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from China