TOP 5 HEALTH LAWS AND POLICY UPDATES

Dear Readers, we are happy to share the most interesting legal and policy updates concerning health industry that we read today. We hope you enjoy reading it.

1. The Central Drugs Standard Control Organization (CDSCO) has invited stakeholder comments on the use of brand name extensions by pharmaceutical companies. The consultation follows concerns that different drugs marketed under the same established brand name may mislead consumers and create confusion regarding therapeutic use. Comments are invited until 17 July 2026.
Source: short-url.cc/1yKJk

2. India’s Madras High Court held that consignments imported as “waste paper” were in fact used plastic bottles, street sweepings, food waste making their import into India illegal under the Customs Act and Hazardous Waste Rules. The Court rejected the importers’ request to send the waste to Dubai, ruling that “re-export” means returning the waste to the country of origin, not to a third country chosen by the importer. The Court further condemned the practice of developed countries shifting hazardous waste to developing nations as “waste colonialism,” which undermines the environmental justice and threatens public health and ecological security. The Court refused permission to process or dispose of waste within India, to avoid becoming a “disposal destination” for foreign waste. The petitions were dismissed, the waste was ordered to be returned to the exporting countries within 60 days, and costs were imposed on the petitioners.
Source: short-url.cc/1yKL6

3. India’s Pune Municipal Corporation (PMC) has issued show-cause notices to private hospitals for non-compliance with the Bombay Nursing Homes Registration Act, 1949, including the failure to display treatment charges and patients’ rights. PMC has directed the hospitals to rectify the identified deficiencies within the prescribed timeline. The enforcement action follows inspections conducted as part of routine compliance monitoring and in response to public complaints.
Source: short-url.cc/1tdPE

4. The Indian working group on access to medicines and treatments has urged the central government to revise the National List of Essential Medicines (NLEM) by including newer cancer medicines and monoclonal antibodies. The group states that the current NLEM does not reflect the World Health Organization (WHO) model list of essential medicines.
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5. The Food Safety and Standards Authority of India has issued show cause notices to multiple food business operators for allegedly misleading claims, including the use of terms such as “fresh,” “healthy,” “natural,” “organic,” and “vegan.” The regulator has reiterated that such claims must strictly comply with the applicable labelling and advertising regulations.
Source: short-url.cc/1tdQe