Make me your Homepage
left corner left corner
China Daily Website

Not the right prescription for European regulators

Updated: 2013-11-25 07:50
By Robert Verkerk ( China Daily)

Steps taken by the European Union and the UK government have put a spoke in the wheels of traditional Chinese medicine, the healthcare system fine-tuned by China's scientists and clinicians over more than four millennia.

Having handed sovereignty to the EU on crucial matters such as key aspects of healthcare and trade, the British government is now choosing to jettison or stall actions that could safeguard the future of TCM.

This includes the recently stated intention by the British medicines regulator, the Medicines and Healthcare products Regulatory Agency, to terminate the "sell-through" of unlicensed herbal medicines by the end of this year. This will mark the effective end of an exemption that has allowed the sale of manufactured unlicensed herbal products for more than 40 years.

In a stay of execution, the MHRA allowed unlicensed products legally in the sales pipeline to be "sold through" after May 2011. However, on Dec 31, the door will close. Any unlicensed products will effectively become illegal. The extent of the impact of this change will largely depend on two factors:

On how many existing products the MHRA considers medicinal as opposed to being food supplements;

The intensity and effectiveness of its policing and enforcement efforts.

The EU Directive on the Traditional Herbal Medicinal Products is responsible for burying the UK-specific exemption. The directive essentially provides a drug-licensing scheme that is referred to as "simplified" because it replaces the need for costly clinical trials that prove efficacy with evidence of historical safe use.

However, it still requires that the other two pillars of drug licensing, namely safety and quality control, are met. It is ironic that TCM is a serious casualty of a European law that was originally conceived to allow TCM and other "non-conventional" medicinal systems to be made widely available to the public, without exposing them to unnecessary risks.

In its attempt to prevent a repeat of a tragedy affecting more than 100 women in the early 1990s after they were prescribed a herb-drug cocktail for weight loss by Western medical doctors in a Brussels clinic, the European Parliament conducted a detailed study of TCM and other systems of traditional or "non-conventional" medicine. It published its findings in 1997 and the report effectively triggered the development of the directive to ensure all Chinese and other non-conventional medicinal products provided to the public were safe.

But given that the directive is not intended for products prescribed by practitioners, being intended instead for products sold directly to the end-consumer for minor ailments that do not require medical supervision, its remit in no way covered the type of cocktail dispensed by the doctors in the Brussels clinic.

The directive also contains eligibility criteria that make it very difficult, or even impossible, for most TCM products to be licensed. Among the numerous obstacles posed by the EU directive is the requirement for inclusion of only herbal ingredients or extracts. Accordingly, minerals and animal-derived products are excluded. It also requires stability data suited more for synthetically derived drugs, rather than complex combinations of naturally sourced materials.

The result is that not a single complex, classic TCM formulation has yet to be registered under the scheme. In effect, therefore, the directive has attempted on one hand to protect the public from problems that do not exist while, on the other, failed to deal with genuine issues of public safety, as exposed by the Belgian tragedy, aspects in which TCM or complementary medicine practitioners played no role whatsoever.

The only remaining safeguard for practitioner prescribed products is another exemption, originally also mandated in the 1968 Medicines Act, that allows unlicensed herbal products to be prescribed to patients following a one-to-one consultation, provided the remedy is manufactured, assembled on the clinician's premises.

Just how long this provision will remain is unclear. It does not allow prescription of any finished products, let alone their purchase directly by members of the public without a consultation.

The UK government's promise made in February 2011 by the then secretary of state for health, Andrew Lansley, to bring in a system of statutory regulation of herbalists in 2012, has already been broken. The Department of Health is unable to make any commitment if or when the process to regulate herbalists by statute may be resumed, the risk being that, in time, herbalists, or traditional medicine practitioners, may not be allowed any special privileges irrespective of their experience or qualifications.

While the TCM, Ayurvedic and other communities representing non-European systems of medicine have spent many years in dialogue with British authorities, it is deeply disappointing that, despite huge interest and uptake by the public, the UK is prepared to do little to protect these complex, yet highly effective traditions that have withstood the test of time.

The author is executive director, Alliance for Natural Health International, a non-governmental organization based in the UK.

 
8.03K
 
...
主站蜘蛛池模板: 欧美成人在线影院| 西西人体免费视频| 在线观看免费av网站| 中文字幕一级片| 日韩国产在线观看| 亚洲午夜精品久久久久久人妖| 狠狠爱天天综合色欲网| 午夜dj在线观看免费高清在线| 超级色的网站观看在线| 国产放荡对白视频在线观看| 69av免费观看| 大胸喷奶水的www的视频网站| 一级特色大黄美女播放网站| 无码人妻精品一二三区免费| 久久精品国产乱子伦| 欧美XXXX做受欧美1314| 亚洲最大激情网| 污污内射在线观看一区二区少妇| 免费一级毛片在线观看| 精品无码国产污污污免费网站| 国产乱人伦app精品久久| 黄色一级片免费看| 国产成人高清亚洲一区久久| 青青草原亚洲视频| 国产精品美女久久久久AV福利| 99久久无码一区人妻| 天天摸天天做天天爽| yin荡护士揉捏乱p办公室视频| 性xxxfreexxxx性欧美| 中国成人在线视频| 插鸡网站在线播放免费观看| 久久a级毛片免费观看| 日本大乳高潮视频在线观看| 久久精品国产亚洲AV麻豆不卡| 最新孕妇孕交视频| 亚洲av日韩综合一区在线观看| 欧美亚洲欧美区| 亚洲国产av无码专区亚洲av| 欧美大香线蕉线伊人久久| 亚洲妇女水蜜桃av网网站| 欧美日韩成人在线观看|