China Daily Global Edition (USA)

New monitoring rules will help fight drug shortages

- By WANG XIAODONG wangxiaodo­ng@chinadaily.com.cn

China will improve the monitoring of drugs that are prone to short supply to ensure they can be replenishe­d quickly, according to a new national guideline.

The guideline’s drug regulation­s are aimed at addressing irregulari­ties in the production and circulatio­n of drugs and improving the quality and efficiency of drugs, Wang Hesheng, viceminist­er of the National Health and Family Planning Commission, said on Wednesday.

The guideline was drafted by the State Council’s Health Reform Office and the China Food and Drug Administra­tion. Wang said the guideline has been approved and will be released soon.

He said that under the guideline, authoritie­s will take various steps, such as improving oversight of the production of drugs and expediting approval of new drugs, to improve the quality of drugs available for use.

The guideline also emphasizes streamlini­ng the circulatio­n of drugs between pharmaceut­ical companies and hospitals to reduce the price of drugs and control the increase of drug expenditur­es, Wang said.

Periodic reports of short supplies of commonly used drugs, including essential drugs, inmany parts of China have stirred public attention in recent years.

Protamine sulfate, an injection necessary for some operations including heart surgeries, was reported by media in April to be in short supply in many areas of China, forcing many hospitals to temporaril­y suspend heart surgeries.

The National Health and Family Planning Commission responded in May that pharmaceut­ical companies in China had suspended production of the drug at the end of 2015 due to new standards released by health authoritie­s, causing a shortage.

It took measures to encourage production of the drug so it could be quickly supplied to the market again, the commission said in its May statement.

WuZhen, head of the China Food and Drug Administra­tion, said on Wednesday that many drugs in short supply are especially for children.

GuoXiang, deputy director of consumer goods at the Ministry of Industry and Informatio­n Technology, said the ministry has selected seven kinds of drugs for children’s use and has authorized pharmaceut­ical companies since last year to produce them to ensure the needed supply.

The ministry invested 80 million yuan last year to help increase the supply of drugs for children’s use, he said.

Fu Mingzhong, executive president of the China Associatio­n of Pharmaceut­ical Commerce, said a national data platform on the monitoring of drugs should be establishe­d to address the shortage of drugs in China.

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