China Launches Campaign to Ensure Medicine Safety
China Launches Campaign to Ensure Medicine Safety
China's State Food and Drug Administration is set to launch a nationwide probe into the quality of essential drugs in a bid to protect people from problem medication. The drugs being looked at are those deemed to satisfy the basic healthcare needs of the majority of the population.
The two-month examination will look closely at how drugs are produced and where the raw materials are sourced, said an online notice issued by the administration on Friday. The way traditional Chinese medicine is prepared will also be looked at.
Drug authorities across the mainland will carry out on-site examinations at production facilities and report their findings to the administration before the end of June. Through such campaigns, according to the notice, an effective working mechanism that ensures drug safety, particularly the safety of widely used essential drugs, is expected to be set up.
According to industry analysts, China's major problems with drug safety are in the areas of anti-infection drugs and traditional Chinese medicine. In 2010, China's National Center for Adverse Drug Reaction Monitoring received 692,904 reports of adverse reactions, 8.4 percent more than in 2009, official statistics showed. Out of that total, 109,991 were reports of new or severe adverse reactions, making for an increase of 16.2 percent year-on-year.
The action was called for after a sample was obtained by the department's inspectors and found to contain about two times the permitted level of mercury, it said. The case has been referred to the administration for further investigation.
Strengthening the supervision of essential drugs' production and quality to ensure safety is a working priority for the country's drug authorities, the notice said. It also demanded effective measures be adopted to eliminate essential drugs' quality problems and remove any hidden risks.