TOP 5 HEALTH LAWS & POLICY UPADATES

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 Licensing authority has mandated to file all Post Approval Change (Form CT-06) applications for Cell and Gene Therapeutic Products exclusively through the SUGAM online portal after October 24 2025. Offline submissions will no longer be accepted thereafter.
Source: urli.info/1e0FX

2. The Indian Pharmacopoeia Commission has reportedly introduced 22 quality standards for blood and its components to ensure safe transfusions across India. These standards, to be included in the Indian Pharmacopoeia 2026, establish globally first comprehensive benchmarks ensuring quality, safety, and infection-free blood for patients nationwide.
Source: urli.info/1iNpx

3. The Ministry of Health and Family Welfare has issued draft amendments to the Drugs Rules, 1945, introducing provisions to debar applicants found submitting misleading, fake, or fabricated documents for licences or approvals. Offenders may face suspension for a defined period, with the right to appeal within 30 days. Stakeholder comments invited within 30 days of publication.
Source: urli.info/1e0Fx

4. The Delhi High Court held that a doctor accused of medical negligence can continue to earn a livelihood by working at other medical centres. The Court clarified that the restriction only bars the doctor from running their own centre and does not prevent them from practising their profession elsewhere.
Source: urli.info/1e0FN

5. A Consumer Dispute Redressal Forum in India has held that the absence of a pathologist’s physical signature on medical reports cannot alone justify the denial of an insurance claim. In a case where a policyholder’s claim was rejected due to a missing signature, the forum directed the insurer to reimburse the cost after finding no evidence of fraud.
Source: urli.info/1iNph

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 District Consumer Disputes Redressal Commission (DCDRC) in Kochi has ordered a hospital and its doctor to pay ₹5 lakh in compensation after treating a patient for COVID-19 despite her RT-PCR test returning negative. The court found that the hospital failed to inform the patient of her negative status and administered unnecessary COVID-related treatments, causing significant mental and physical distress.
Source: bit.ly/40oTuIN

2. India’s drug regulator, CDSCO has identified 41 drug samples as ‘Not of Standard Quality’ (NSQ) following tests conducted in November, with an additional 70 samples flagged by state laboratories. Two samples were also found to be spurious, linked to unauthorized manufacturers. The Union Health Ministry has initiated investigations and emphasized that the identification of NSQ drugs is part of routine surveillance to enhance the quality of medicines available in the market.
Source: bit.ly/3PgINRZ

3. A pathologist in Maharashtra has been suspended and removed from the Medical Register by the Maharashtra Medical Council for three years for allowing a laboratory to use its signature while operating with an expired license.
Source: bit.ly/4fCsw4C

4. Homeopathic practitioners in Maharashtra are now permitted to prescribe allopathic medicines, provided they have completed a certified course in modern pharmacology, as per a new clarification from the Maharashtra Food and Drug Administration (FDA). However, the action has been criticized by the Indian Medical Association (IMA) as “mixopathy,” as it raises concerns about patient safety and the integrity of medical practice.
Source: bit.ly/41SZsCy

5. The Indian Medical Association (IMA) has launched the IMA AMR Smart Hospital Project, an initiative aimed at combating Antimicrobial Resistance (AMR) through advanced Antimicrobial Stewardship (AMS) and Infection Prevention and Control (IPC) practices. This certification program, the first of its kind globally, seeks to promote best practices in antimicrobial usage across hospitals and enhance patient safety.
Source: bit.ly/3DBawdC