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IndiaCulture5 days ago

Government: No cough syrup sale without prescription

The Indian government has removed cough syrups from Schedule K of the Drugs Rules, 1945, requiring them to be sold only with a prescription and through licensed pharmacies. This follows concerns over contaminated syrups linked to child deaths in Madhya Pradesh and aims to enhance regulatory oversight and public health safety.

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Buying cough syrup without a doctor's prescription may no longer be possible after the Centre withdrew a decades-old exemption that allowed certain syrup formulations to be sold under relaxed regulatory conditions. The change comes months after contaminated cough syrups linked to child deaths in MP triggered a WHO alert. The health ministry has amended the Drugs Rules, 1945 by removing "syrups" from Schedule K. Lozenges, pills and tablets for cough, however, continue to remain on the exempted list. The exemption had allowed cough syrups to be sold as household remedies in villages with populations below 1,000. With the amendment coming into force, cough syrups will now have to be sold through licensed pharmacies, bringing them under the regular regulatory framework governing medicines. Officials said the latest amendment is intended to strengthen regulatory oversight, improve accountability in the distribution chain and align older exemptions with present-day public health and safety requirements. Health experts said the change could improve traceability and regulatory monitoring of cough syrups, which remain among the most commonly used medicines in rural India.

Read the full article at Times of India
Source document: Health Ministry

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Times of IndiaIndependentCenter5 days ago
Government: No cough syrup sale without prescription

The Indian government has removed cough syrups from Schedule K of the Drugs Rules, 1945, requiring them to be sold only with a prescription and through licensed pharmacies. This follows concerns over contaminated syrups linked to child deaths in Madhya Pradesh and aims to enhance regulatory oversight and public health safety.

Bias read (Center): The article presents factual information about a policy change related to cough syrup regulations. It does not exhibit biased language, one-sided sourcing, or omission of context. The content focuses on regulatory changes and their implications for public health without taking a clear ideological or

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  • government Health Ministry
  • organisation WHO

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  • governmentHealth Ministry
  • organisationWHO