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 Trade and Economic Partnership Agreement (TEPA) with the European Free Trade Association (EFTA), effective October 1, 2025, reportedly excludes medical devices and pharmaceuticals from duty concessions, keeping them protected to safeguard domestic industries. While 92.2% of EFTA and 82.7% of India’s tariff lines are liberalised, sensitive healthcare products will face phased tariff reductions over 5–10 years.
Source: https://short-url.org/1hoSo

2. Central drug regulator (CDSCO) is reportedly set to conduct nationwide inspections and audits of cough syrup manufacturing units after child deaths in Madhya Pradesh were linked to toxic syrups. States and union territories have been directed to submit lists of manufacturers for surveillance, aiming to strengthen quality control and prevent contamination-related tragedies.
Source: https://short-url.org/1cGQR

3. Department of Pharmaceuticals has launched sensitisation programmes to guide pharmaceutical and medical technology companies on the amended Promotion of Research and Innovation in Pharma-MedTech Sector scheme. The sessions will help companies to understand the revised guidelines, and digital application process to ensure smooth participation.
Source: https://short-url.org/1cGR3

4. India’s Central food authority has issued a draft amendment to Packaging regulations 2018 to restrict the use of Poly- and perfluoroalkyl substances (PFAs) in food contact materials. It also states that food materials made with polycarbonate and epoxy resins must be free from Bisphenol A (BPA) and its derivatives. Objections / suggestions are awaited from the industry stakeholders for a period of 60 days from the date of publication.
Source: https://short-url.org/1hoTb

5. State drug inspectors are reportedly seeking enforceable powers to arrest and detain offenders, aiming to curb the growing menace of spurious drugs. The demand follows the recent incident involving contaminated cough syrup sold to paediatric patients, which resulted in multiple child deaths.
Source: https://short-url.org/1hoTt

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 Department of Pharmaceuticals has issued revising guidelines under the Promotion of Research & Innovation in Pharma-MedTech (PRIP) Scheme that enhances support for MSMEs and startups, introduces milestone-based funding, and raises grant ceilings for early and later stage projects, with higher support for strategic innovation areas. Applications can be submitted through the online portal.
Source: short-url.org/1bYPF

2. The Department of Pharmaceuticals has amended its 2023 Pharma-MedTech R&D scheme, earmarking ₹5,000 crore till 2030. Key updates include funding up to ₹100 crore per project, Centres of Excellence at NIPERs, industry-academia collaboration, and priority focus on new drugs, complex generics, biosimilars, and novel medical devices
Source: short-url.org/1gEoB

3. The Reserve Bank of India has announced that banks can now finance acquisitions, with increase in loan limits against listed shares and IPO financing. These steps are expected to boost liquidity, enable smoother strategic deals, and provide corporates greater flexibility in accessing capital.
Source: short-url.org/1bYPm

4. India’s Consumer Affairs Ministry is reportedly scrutinising e-commerce platforms for cash-on-delivery charges and delayed or denied prepaid refunds, practices that may constitute unfair trade or service deficiency. The probe could mandate COD surcharge waivers, stricter refund timelines, and penalties, as withheld payments let platforms earn interest, leaving customers feeling cheated.
Source: short-url.org/1bYPW

5. Private hospitals in Telangana are allegedly paying unqualified Rural Medical Practitioners and Paramedical Practitioners commission amounting to up to 40% of the hospitalisation charges for patient referrals.
Source: short-url.org/1gEoZ

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 Department of Pharmaceuticals (DoP) has invited applications for R&D funding in six key areas- (1) New Chemical Entity, New Biological Entity and Phyto-pharmaceuticals (2) Complex generics and Biosimilars (3) Precision medicine (Targeted innovative therapeutics) (4) Medical devices (5) Orphan Drugs and (6) Drug development for AMR funding upto INR 100 Cr (1000   illion) is available.
Source: bit.ly/41AvbXF
Source: bit.ly/4bJLVQU

  1. The Indian government is reportedly considering lowering tariffs on imports of US medical devices to ease trade tensions. Such a policy decision would run counter to India’s Make in India policy and preference to procure medical devices manufactured in India for government hospitals.
    Source: bit.ly/41zI3x8
  1. The UK Government is reportedly proposing to raise the Statutory Scheme payment rate for newer branded medicines from 15.5% to 32.2%. The ‘payment rate’ is the revenue that pharma companies refund to government from sales of branded medicines to the National Health Service (NHS)
    Source: bit.ly/3DSk30j
  1. France has become the second European country, after Denmark, to ban per- and polyfluoroalkyl substances (PFAS) in certain products, including cosmetics, textiles, and ski wax addressing concerns over health and environment. The production, import, export, and sale of PFAS-containing goods will be prohibited in France from  January 2026
    Source: bit.ly/420sUVI
  1. The European Commission has proposed a bill to reduce the European Union’s dependence on India and other countries for antibiotics and other essential medicines by requiring Member States to procure medicines on parameters other than price, in order to incentivize domestic manufacturing. The bill, called Critical Medicines Act, is under consideration.
    Source: bit.ly/4ii2whc