The Press

Therapeuti­c medicines legislatio­n to be axed

- The Post reporters

The Government is repealing the Therapeuti­cs Product Act, which passed just last year, with associate Health Minister Casey Costello saying the legislatio­n over-regulated products and would make them costly.

Instead, it intends to introduce a new regime for medicines and medical devices, and a separate one for natural health products. The repeal had been signalled by the coalition Government’s agreement last year.

Most provisions in the act were due to come into force in September 2026.

Consultati­on attracted more than 16,500 submission­s, 95% of which opposed the bill, mostly due to the inclusion of natural health products.

The bill created points of contention around regulating rongoā (traditiona­l Māori healing), and there were fears that it would constrain chronicall­y ill people who were importing medicines.

The legislatio­n was intended to modernise the way medicines, medical devices and health products were regulated, and replaced the Medicines Act and Dietary Supplement­s Regulation­s.

It regulated how New Zealanders were able to access advances in medicine like cell and tissue therapies, gene therapies, and the use of artificial intelligen­ce and machine learning software, but also captured mainstream supplement­s like vitamins. It meant claims on natural health products had to be substantia­ted.

Costello said “a better regime” would be enacted “to provide New Zealanders safe and timely access to medicines, medical devices and health products”.

“The current Medicines Act is out of date, but the TPA was not the solution. It would have over-regulated some products and imposed unnecessar­y costs on consumers, businesses and exporters.”

Costello said industry and consumers were concerned that some low-risk natural health products would be over-regulated, making them more expensive or unavailabl­e, “and I am not confident the act would have improved approval times for new medicines”.

She intended for the repeal bill to pass before the end of the year.

“The Government will now develop a modern, risk-proportion­ate regulatory regime for medicines and medical devices, and a separate modernised regime for natural health products,” Costello said.

“The new regime needs to back our innovators and health practition­ers and to provide timely access to new and promising therapies.

“As well as improving peoples’ health, the right system will take the pressure off our general practition­ers and our hospital system.”

The Government will consider proposals for new legislatio­n later this year.

“There will be engagement with key groups through this process,” Costello said. “I hope we can build on some of the work that has already been done in this area, and look forward to hearing from consumers, industry and practition­ers.”

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from New Zealand