India Physician Conduct Rules Want Them Off Pharma-Sponsored Symposia

Wider-ranging new draft rules suggest that physicians in India should not engage in educational activity sponsored by pharma and urges them to declare financial earnings and benefits received from industry via an affidavit. The Pink Sheet discusses with industry experts some of the nuances and seeming loopholes in the rules, currently in self-regulatory mode but with penalties proposed for violation.

Lens On Pharma-Sponsored Educational Symposia In India • Source: Shutterstock

India’s new rules pertaining to the professional conduct of Registered Medical Practitioners (RMPs) puts a question mark on the participation of physicians in pharma-sponsored conferences and urges them to come clean about their relationship with industry. The wide-ranging rules cover a gamut of areas including guidelines on social media conduct of RMPs and telemedicine, and also prohibits endorsement of products.

Read the full article – start your free trial today!

Join thousands of industry professionals who rely on Pink Sheet for daily insights

  • Start your 7-day free trial
  • Explore trusted news, analysis, and insights
  • Access comprehensive global coverage
  • Enjoy instant access – no credit card required

More from India

India Signals ‘Systemic Changes’ In CGT Regulatory Approach

 

India is pressing ahead with “big shifts” in its regulatory approach for cell and gene therapies. Reduced “layers of review”, tighter internal timelines, upcoming guidelines to facilitate CGT development and reforms in the constitution of expert committees are some of the key changes.

Pipeline To Product – What Is Driving Cell And Gene Therapy Progress In India?

 
• By 

US-based Colossal Labs has claimed to bring back the dire wolf from extinction. While the science is not as dramatic in India yet, cell and gene therapies are making progress as treatments for cancer and other diseases. Pink Sheet takes a look at what is driving CGT success and growth.

Trump Tariffs: Indian Pharma Dodges Bullet, But Sword May Remain

 
• By 

Trump announced a 26% reciprocal tariff on India, but a country-agnostic exemption of pharmaceuticals implies that the interests of Indian firms are protected for now. What is Indian pharma’s business exposure and what is domestic industry saying?

Combating Bioequivalence Data Fraud: Indian CROs Face Mandatory Registration

 

As Indian CROs are bracing for new registration mandates, an expert panel at the IGBA’s 3rd Bioequivalence conference discusses the implications of non-compliance in bioequivalence studies.

More from Asia

Japan Identifies Drugs ‘In Urgent Need’ Of Development

 
• By 

Artesunate for malaria, TB drug pretomanid and omadacycline for pneumonia and skin infections are among the drugs identified by Japanese regulatory authorities in urgent need of domestic development.

US Tariff Impact On Korea Dissected As Country Gears For Presidential Election

 
• By 

Analysts expect a limited impact on South Korean pharma from US tariffs, even if imposed at a later date. Meanwhile, the early June domestic presidential election is set to determine the direction of policies in the sector.

Trump Tariffs: Indian Pharma Dodges Bullet, But Sword May Remain

 
• By 

Trump announced a 26% reciprocal tariff on India, but a country-agnostic exemption of pharmaceuticals implies that the interests of Indian firms are protected for now. What is Indian pharma’s business exposure and what is domestic industry saying?