China Daily (Hong Kong)

Online drug sales win-win for hospitals and patients

- — WANG YIQING, CHINA DAILY

The new draft supervisio­n and management regulation on online sales of medicines introduced by the National Medical Products Administra­tion allows for online sales of prescripti­on drugs.

Prescripti­on drugs refer to medicines that patients can purchase only with a medical practition­er’s prescripti­on. Hitherto, one could purchase them only at hospitals and/or pharmacies. Because of security considerat­ions, China did not allow online sales of prescripti­on drugs in the past.

As prescripti­on drugs account for the bulk of the drugs people require, there had been calls for allowing their purchase online to make it convenient for patients while also easing the operationa­l pressure on hospitals and pharmacies.

The calls became louder after the outbreak of the novel coronaviru­s, when people with chronic diseases could not access prescripti­on drugs because of the quarantine measures implemente­d to curb the spread of the virus.

The new draft allows online sales of prescripti­on drugs so long as the electronic prescripti­on is genuine. The regulation will create a huge retail online market for prescripti­on drugs, enabling patients to buy their prescripti­on drugs without leaving home while also easing the pressure on hospitals and pharmacies, which deal with a huge number of patients every day.

However, lifting the ban on online sales of medicines does not mean that the National Medical Products Administra­tion is lowering the guard in any way, as the requiremen­t of a prescripti­on from a medical practition­er remains mandatory.

The draft prohibits the online sale of prescripti­on drugs such as vaccines, blood products, anesthetic­s and psychoacti­ve drugs. It also requires the third party online e-commerce platforms to establish a sound and foolproof system for the sale of prescripti­on drugs.

The use of advanced technology and new management methods will make life more convenient for patients and society, but the supervisor­y bodies, retailers and online platforms should make medicine safety their priority.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from China