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BEIJING, May 30 (Xinhua) -- China's pharmaceutical
watchdog on Tuesday launched a six-month national campaign to improve the
policing of drug markets in a bid to prevent accidents caused by fake drugs and
medical equipment.
At a national meeting in Beijing, State Food and Drug
Administration (SFDA) leaders told branch officials to enhance supervision of
license applications, and the production, distribution and use of drugs,
vaccines and medical equipment.
Drug companies found giving misleading information in their license
applications would be blacklisted and publicly named, and those with inadequate
management, illegal production and potentialrisks to the safety of drugs in
production would be punished, an SFDA official said.
Drugs packaging, labels and instructions must ensure that the chemical
names are more noticeable than their commercial names, tohelp the public avoid
paying inflated prices for common medicines.
It also urged improved surveillance and reporting of negative effects or
incidents of drugs and medical equipment, and stepped up coordination with
health departments in publicity and management of drugs in clinical use.
Drug and food safety was crucial to people's lives and their supervision
and inspection required constant effort and attention,said Vice-Premier Wu Yi in
a letter delivered to the meeting.
The campaign is due to start in June and "must achieve progress", said Shao
Mingli, head of the SFDA.
Nine people died earlier this month and two others are still fighting for
their lives after receiving fake drugs in Guangzhou, capital of South China's
Guangdong Province, earlier this month.
They received injections of a drug purporting to be Armillarisni A produced
by the Qiqihar No. 2 Pharmaceutical Co., Ltd., a private manufacturer based in
northeast China's Heilongjiang Province.
Two people are still in a critical condition after falling intoa complete
coma.
The government closed the company and banned the sale of all its medicines
after the incident was revealed. Efforts have also been made to trace and recall
drugs.
Chinese Premier Wen Jiabao ordered government departments to launch a
thorough investigation into the incident and intensify the regulation of the
pharmaceutical market. Enditem
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