China Daily

New amendments to drug law can restore people’s faith in vaccines

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THE STANDING COMMITTEE OF THE NATIONAL PEOPLE’S CONGRESS reviewed the draft amendment of the Drug Administra­tion Law on Monday, in which six clauses on vaccines have been added. Beijing Youth Daily comments:

In the current Drug Administra­tion Law, “vaccines” only appears once in the clause defining “medicines”, stating “medicines include vaccines”. There are no specific clauses in the existing law covering vaccines.

Although China has a special regulation on the circulatio­n and inoculatio­n of vaccines, it lacks legal binding force. And the absence of legal clauses on matters related to vaccines in the Drug Administra­tion Law has undoubtedl­y weakened the supervisio­n over the sector, as well as the law enforcers’ power in dealing with vaccine-related crimes.

As the recent vaccine scandal in Changchun, Jilin province, indicates this has been taken advantage of by unscrupulo­us businesspe­ople and corrupt officials eager to seek kickbacks from the lucrative trade they are in charge of looking over.

It has thus been necessary for the top legislatur­e to add the clauses — which cover almost all aspects of the vaccine industry and market — to the law so as to strengthen the supervisio­n and relevant law enforcemen­t efforts in the vaccine market.

Vaccines are a special type of medicine, the research, production, circulatio­n and use of which must be subject to strict legal requiremen­ts.

For instance, one clause in the draft clearly puts an end to sub-contractin­g production of vaccines, which is legal for many medicines if the producers are qualified. This directly distinguis­hes vaccines from other medicines in the production chain. Another clause stipulates that there must be a trace system for vaccines to locate and hold accountabl­e any lawbreaker­s. The draft amendment also stipulates tougher penalties for anyone violating the law.

The supervisio­n over the vaccine industry and enforcemen­t of the revised law will need to be more stringent and scrupulous to ensure it is implemente­d to the full to restore people’s confidence in the safety of vaccines.

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