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 Pollution Control Board (CPCB) has extended the deadline for registered Producers, Importers, Brand Owners (PIBOs) and Plastic Waste Processors (PWPs) for filing annual returns under the Plastic Waste Management Rules, 2016 until 31st January 2026. The previous deadline for filing of annual returns was November 30, 2025.
Source: h7.cl/1iapl

2. India’s Central Pollution Control Board (CPCB) has issued a notice clarifying implementation of Extended Producer Responsibility (EPR) guidelines for plastic packaging, permitting regulated inter-category certificate purchases only until FY 2025–26. Producers, importers, and brand owners will then be prohibited from cross-category adjustment of surplus EPR certificates and barred from using end-of-life certificates for recycling targets.
Source: h7.cl/1n9HG

3. The Union Health Minister has directed CDSCO and the Department of Pharmaceuticals to find a workable solution to industry concerns over revised Schedule M GMP norms. The revised guidelines necessitate structural and layout changes to facilities, setting up rigorous quality control systems, and training personnel. The Ministry is considering deadline extensions or relaxations following consultations with industry bodies, particularly for small and medium manufacturers facing compliance issues.
Source: h7.cl/1n9HM

4. The High Court of Allahabad has dismissed petitions by directors and officials of a major drug manufacturer challenging summons for alleged violations under the Drugs and Cosmetics Act after a test analysis found samples to be of substandard quality. The analysis found the presence of ethylene glycol in cough syrup, a toxic industrial chemical. The Court found the summons lawful, as the officials were responsible for the company’s business conduct.
Source: h7.cl/1n9HR

5. India’s Delhi High Court has upheld the rejection of a foreign drug manufacturer’s patent application for a nematode-based cancer detection method, ruling it a non-patentable diagnostic process under the Patents Act, 1970. The court said the invention performs essential diagnostic steps and cannot bypass exclusion by being labelled as screening or in-vitro testing.
Source: h7.cl/1iar0