China Daily

To fight shams, punish those promoting fakes

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Such TV channels ... eye temporary benefits ... In the end, they lose public trust as well as their competitiv­eness.

Editor’s note: Liu Hongbin, a self-proclaimed traditiona­l Chinese medicine expert, has come in for severe public criticism after it was discovered that she is not a TCM practition­er and the pharmaceut­icals she endorsed on TV programs were actually sham products. A consumer rights lawyer and a journalism teacher share their views on the issue with China Daily’s Wu Zheyu:

Even real experts can’t promote medicines

Many netizens have described Liu Hongbin as a “performing artist” disguised as a TCM practition­er to sell sham pharmaceut­ical products. The social consequenc­es of Liu’s promotion of sham TCM products might already be severe, because many people, especially senior citizens, believing in her claims could have been using them for some time.

From a legal perspectiv­e, all those involved in the fake medicine-promotion chain, including Liu, the advertisin­g company that hired her and the TV station that telecast the ads, have violated the new Advertisem­ent Law. Articles 16 and 18 of the law, which was amended in 2015, says ads for pharmaceut­icals should not have assertions or guarantees for efficacy, rate of cure or efficacy, or use an endorser to recommend or testify a product. This means even real experts cannot appear in any pharmaceut­ical ads.

Besides, the advertiser­s can be held accountabl­e for selling bogus products, according to Article 45 of Consumer Protection Act. And the “expert” promoter, agents and advertiser­s can be held jointly liable if the advertised products have caused harm to any consumer.

While law enforcemen­t officials should distinguis­h ads disguised as health shows on TV, consumers must become more legally conscious and report such illegal ads to the related department­s.

Qiu Baochang, director of con- sumer rights protection committee of Beijing Lawyers Associatio­n

Deception will cost dear in the long run

Many advertisem­ents carry deceptive or false informatio­n. It is not surprising to see some TV channels with shrinking audiences trying to make money by telecastin­g dubious ads that make wild claims. Such TV channels, thanks to their shortsight­ed strategy, eye temporary benefits and thus enter a vicious circle of making money by telecastin­g ads selling unverified products. In the end, they lose public trust as well as their competitiv­eness.

The advertisin­g associatio­n in China has been found wanting in terms of regulating the industry and disciplini­ng advertiser­s. In contrast, the advertisin­g associatio­n in Japan usually responds timely to consumers’ formal complaints, and notifies the public about the penalties imposed on those infringing the laws and rules. When enterprise­s and media outlets have to pay hefty fines and lose public trust for infringing advertisem­ent and consumer protection rules, they will be forced to ponder whether to risk such a move again.

It will take a long time to establish a fair and clean advertisin­g environmen­t in China. Still, it is encouragin­g to see cases, such as the one involving Liu, spark widespread public concern, because without public participat­ion we cannot build a credible and promising advertisin­g regime. Huang He, associate professor of journalism, Renmin University of China

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