Updated medicines regulations confirmed
Hon Tony Ryall
Minister of
Health
12 July 2011
Media
Statement
Updated medicines regulations confirmed
The Medicines Regulations 1984 and the Medicines (Standing Order) Regulations 2002, have been amended to better align the law with modern medical practice.
Health Minister Tony Ryall says "The amendments remove many requirements that are unnecessary, ineffective or excessively costly."
The updated regulations:
• allow some fluoride toothpastes,
anti-dandruff shampoos and anti-pimple creams commonly sold
in supermarkets to no longer be treated as
medicines
• include changes to the labelling and
advertising requirements for medicines and related products
to bring them into line with those of other countries,
particularly Australia
• align prescribing rights for
doctors, dentists and midwives by restricting prescribing to
their respective scope of practice and removing the ten day
limit on the period of supply for prescription medicines
issued by dentists
• allow pharmacists to substitute an
alternative brand of a medicine in certain circumstances
• update technical requirements (including how data
sheets are prepared and distributed, and how prescriptions
are dispensed)
• remove some of the barriers to
bringing electronic prescribing closer to reality by
allowing the Director General of Health to issue a waiver to
permit electronic prescribing in specified situations
• allow the sale of “general sale” medicines
through vending machines such as some cough and cold
remedies and medicines to treat travel sickness, which are
already sold by a wide range of shops such as supermarkets,
dairies, petrol stations and mixed-merchandise
stores.
•
The Government has also agreed to make
amendments to the Medicines Act covering prescribing, to do
two things:
• Align prescribing rights of all health
professionals with independent prescribing rights - medical
practitioners, dentists, midwives, nurse practitioners and
optometrists – and require them to prescribe within their
scopes of practice for patients under their care
• Create a new category of prescriber – a delegated
prescriber - under the supervision of an independent
prescriber, allowing highly trained health professionals in
a collaborative team environment and under supervision, to
prescribe within their scope of practice, for a specific
group of
patients.
ENDS