Pharmacy in China

Unaffordable medications are a hole in the Chinese safety net. This forces workers to save as much as possible in order to weather family medical emergencies, which acts to depress domestic consumption, leaving no alternative to the traditional unsustainable export and investment driven economic model.[1]

Drug policy

China has implemented a National Essential Drug Policy.[2]

Pharmacy schools and programs

There are three universities in mainland China specializing in the pharmaceutical sciences and pharmaceutical industry:

Counterfeit drugs

Figures in China report almost 200,000 persons are said to have died in 2001 as a consequence of having taken counterfeit drugs.[3]

There are major difficulties for patients accessing expensive pharmaceuticals which encourage smuggling and even home manufacture. The state healthcare system does not cover many drugs, and for those that are covered there is a 30% copayment. The approval process is slow and bureaucratic. Only 100 new drugs were approved between 2001 and 2016 by the China Food and Drug Administration. Once approved, drugs have to be included in the National Reimbursement Drug List to qualify for coverage. Prices are much higher than in other Asian countries. [4]

Online and mail-order pharmacies

Online pharmacies were first established in China in 2005. By the end of 2008, only 10 online pharmacies had obtained permission to sell over-the-counter drugs,[5] a figure that had increased to 639 by January, 2017.[6] Online sales increased in line with the number of pharmacies. The China Food and Drug Administration conducted a pilot reform to admit three businesses using their third-party platform to retail drugs online to consumers from 2013 until August 2016, accounting for to some extent difficulty in its regulation.[7]

Museums

  • The Museum of Huqingyutang Chinese Pharmacy

See also

References

Further reading

Pharmacovigilance
Pharmacoeconomics
Chinese pharmaceutical policy
International conferences
People
Comparative study
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.