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Essence of this submission
The Treatment Action Campaign (TAC) and the AIDS Law Project (ALP)
recognise the need for, and strongly support, legislative reform to ensure that
the Medicines Control Council (MCC) is able effectively and efficiently to
regulate medicines and other health products. This, we are told, is the
ostensible purpose of the draft Medicines and Related Substances
Amendment Bill, 2008 ("the draft Bill").
But if the draft Bill were ever to become law, this would not be achieved.
Instead, its enactment would signal the final death knell of the scientific
governance of medicines and clinical trials in South Africa. In our view, this is
the latest attack on the evidence-based regulation of medicines and clinical
trials, which began in early 1997 when the then independent and
internationally respected MCC intervened to stop unauthorised and unethical
trials on the industrial solvent Virodene.
This latest development, made in the name of improving effectiveness and
efficiency, seeks to destroy what to date has only been weakened. It does so
by proposing an amendment to the Medicines and Related Substances Act
101 of 1965 ("the Medicines Act") that will effectively allow the Minister of
Health ("the Minister") to block the registration of medicines of proven quality,
safety and efficacy, as well as to allow the sale and provision of untested
"treatments" and "cures".
The TAC and ALP are concerned that the current Minister is pursuing a
dangerous agenda that, if successful, will severely undermine the work of the
next Minister, Cabinet and Parliament. With this understanding, we submit
that the draft Bill is irredeemably flawed and should be withdrawn. In addition to its problematic substance, it has been developed - and is likely to be processed by the Department of Health (DoH) - in an unaccountable and non-transparent manner that makes a mockery of public consultation.
Instead of rushing to table draft legislation in Parliament, the DoH should
embark on a process of open and accountable engagement with all domestic
stakeholders – and not just the pharmaceutical industry – on how and in what
way the MCC's statutory mandate can and should be amended to ensure that
it is indeed in a position appropriately to regulate the development,
registration and use of safe and effective medicines of good quality free from
political interference.
The full submission by the TAC and ALP can be read here. |