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. India’s central food authority (FSSAI) has extended the enforcement date for the amended labelling requirements under the Alcoholic Beverages Regulations, 2025. The earlier deadline of 1 January 2026 is now postponed to 1 July 2026. The decision follows stakeholder concerns that mid-year labelling changes would disrupt operations, cause wastage of pre-printed labels, and create additional costs, especially due to State Excise label-registration cycles.
Source: h7.cl/1kc0S

2. India is reportedly negotiating mutual recognition agreements (MRAs) with major partners such as the US, EU, UK, Singapore and ASEAN to align inspection and testing systems. The aim is to cut rejections, ease trade friction and streamline exports of basmati rice, spices, tea, coffee, marine products, fruits and vegetables, improving global competitiveness.
Source: h7.cl/1flqZ

3. India’s central food authority (FSSAI) has issued amendments to the FSS (Alcoholic Beverages) Regulations, 2018 wherein the permissible maximum level of ethyl acetate esters in alcoholic beverages has been increase from “0.2” g/l to “3.0” g/l.
Source: h7.cl/1kc16

4. India’s Drugs Consultative Committee has agreed to add levonorgestrel tablets in 0.75 mg and 1.5 mg widely known as morning-after pills to Schedule K, enabling continued OTC sales. This also includes provisions for a boxed warning on packaging highlighting side effects, no protection against HIV/STIs, limits on use, and recommendations for consulting practitioners on alternatives.
Source: h7.cl/1kbV8

5. The Supreme Court of India has reportedly directed Noida District Hospital to constitute a primary medical board within two weeks to assess passive euthanasia for a 31-year-old man who has been quadriplegic and in a vegetative state for more than a decade.
Source: h7.cl/1flra

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 Maharashtra Medical Council is set to launch a portal to register homeopathy practitioners who hold a one-year “Certificate Course in Modern Pharmacology” (CCMP), per government directive. Doctors’ groups have opposed this by stating that this move undermines MBBS standards, risks public health, and have demanded the notification’s immediate withdrawal.
Source: short-url.org/1eGvx

2. A renowned hospital has launched a ‘Living Will Clinic’ to help terminally ill patients document their medical preferences when recovery is not possible. Patients can predefine interventions like ventilation, CPR, surgery or home-vs-hospital death, appoint a healthcare representative, during critical moments.
Source: short-url.org/1eFVl

3. Computer Emergency Response Team – India (CERT-In) has mandated annual cybersecurity audits for all MSMEs starting September 1, 2025. Key mandates include, establishing a minimum security baseline, reporting incidents within six hours, keeping 180-day system logs, conducting yearly vulnerability assessments, and providing regular employee cybersecurity training.
Source: short-url.org/1eFVu
Source: short-url.org/1a5Na

4. The Delhi government has decided to establish a special committee under the Health Department to suppress the sale of counterfeit medicines across the city. Four specialised teams will conduct midnight raids especially near hospitals and medical shops. Seized drugs will go through laboratory testing to confirm authenticity.
Source: short-url.org/1a5Gx

5. Drug Controller General of India has directed state authorities in Gujarat and Delhi to take action against drug marketers associated with manufacturers who failed risk based inspections. Labels in some cases listed marketers with invalid addresses. Actions may include cancelling licences, stopping production, suspending product permissions however, it may disrupt the medical supply.
Soruce: short-url.org/1aatp

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. India’s Central Drug Regulator the Central Drugs Standards Control Organization (CDSCO) has been made an affiliate member of the International Medical Device Regulators Forum (IMDRF). The application submitted by the Indian Government has been accepted contingent on the adoption of comprehensive regulation of Medical Devices in alignment with the existing international standards.
Source: bit.ly/3TQ1GOb

2. India’s Ministry of Health and Family Welfare has introduced Guidelines for Withdrawal of Life Support in Terminally Ill Patients, which sets out the institutional oversight requirements to facilitate ethical and informed decision-making in this regard.
Source: bit.ly/4eReyf6

3. The Supreme Court has held that in case of criminal suits which have an overwhelming civil quality, i.e. are based on private wrongs, where the parties to such criminal suits have already settled with each other, High Courts should exercise their powers under Sec. 482 of the CrPC and quash the underlying criminal proceedings.
Source: bit.ly/4dyF1wQ

4. India’s Central Drugs regulatory authority the Central Drugs Standards Control Organization (CDSCO) has decided that it will initiate action against a manufacturer of eye-drops, which had recently made social-media posts and conducted conferences regarding its new product, which had come under scrutiny for the claim that it would manage near-sightedness, and in pursuance of that, forwarded the matter to the State Drug Regulator of the state of Gujarat where the company is based.
Source: bit.ly/4dtuYJL

5. A prominent US based medical systems and medical devices manufacturer which has suffered a data-breach of its systems leading to the leak of sensitive personal and medical information of its patients, is currently facing a class-action lawsuit on grounds that the breach was caused due to non-adherence to industry standard practices in data storage and security.
Source: bit.ly/3BHdjRl