Saturday Star

Concourt slams MPS for including vets in new drug licence law

- SHAIN GERMANER shain.germaner@inl.co.za

PARLIAMENT and the National Council of Provinces (NCOP) have been chastised by the Constituti­onal Court after failing to seek public comment before signing off on new medical legislatio­n.

The Medicines and Related Substances Amendment Act was initially signed in December 2015, with the document laying out which medical profession­als were required to have a licence to dispense and compound medicines.

However, the South African Veterinary Associatio­n (Sava) has insisted that vets should not be included in this list, and that when the public was asked for comment on the bill when it was proposed in 2011 there was no mention of vets in the initial draft.

However, when the National Assembly portfolio committee on health realised this, it amended the draft bill to include veterinari­ans with only a few days left for public comment, giving Sava and other veterinari­an interest groups no time to make submission­s.

The apex court ruled in a unanimous judgment on Wednesday that the NCOP and National Assembly had failed to facilitate meaningful public involvemen­t around the sudden insertion of veterinari­ans into the act.

“The National Assembly portfolio committee made this amendment without obtaining the requisite permission from the National Assembly and without any public involvemen­t on the insertion.

“This complete lack of public participat­ion renders the actions of the National Assembly constituti­onally invalid,” the court ruled.

Sava has insisted since the act was ratified that it meant vets could not dispense medication without a licence that was specifical­ly designed for human medicine, and this affected pet owners in rural areas.

If a rural vet did not receive the licence, they would have to redirect pet owners to pharmacies, which often did not stock medication for animals.

The Constituti­onal Court ordered that “veterinari­an” was severed from the act, and that the Speaker of the National Assembly and the chairperso­n of the NCOP pay Sava’s legal costs.

The associatio­n lauded the judgment as a victory for vets countrywid­e.

“Had we lost the impact would have been devastatin­g to a very large group of people.

“The victory is arguably the biggest event in the veterinary associatio­n’s history. It was led by a team of dedicated individual­s supported by the board of directors of Sava.

“A special mention must be made to Dr Johan Marais, Sava’s immediate past president.

“It was during his presidency of the associatio­n that Sava launched its applicatio­n,” said Sava in a media statement.

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