In the wake of several drug production scandals the Chinese
government has tightened up application procedures for firms
seeking to manufacture drugs.
The threshold to qualify for a Good Manufacturing Practice (GMP)
certification has been raised and will come into effect on January
1 next year.
"The new standards are stricter in granting GMP certificates to
drug manufacturers," said Bian Zhenjia, director with the drug
safety supervision department under the State Food and Drug
Administration (SFDA), China's drug watchdog.
Before revision, if less than three "severe defects" as defined
in the standards were discovered in the entire drug making process,
the manufacturers could still get a certificate if they corrected
the problem within a prescribed time limit.
The new standards, however, allow no "severe defects" according
to Bian.
"The new standards have strengthened supervision over weak links
in quality control of drug manufacturers," Bian said.
The revised standards comprise 259 articles, an increase of 34
articles from the current standards which were put into effect in
1999.
And the "key" articles have been augmented from previous 56 to
92, according to Bian.
"The changes mainly dwell on technological requirements on
management which concerns areas including personnel qualifications,
production process, quality control and document verification in a
bid to ensure drug quality," Bian explained.
The new standards also stipulate that companies falsifying
application documents shall be regarded as having a "severe
defect," meaning they will fail the GMP certification.
(Xinhua News Agency October 30, 2007)