In this episode, HBW Insight looks at yet another piece of EU sustainability legislation, this time the Green Claims Code. Sustainability expert Jo Stephenson, managing director of PHD Marketing, explains the background to the legislation, which proposes detailed rules for companies that wish to make environmental claims. Although companies are not required to make green claims, and may choose not to given these stricter rules, Stephenson points out that companies will soon be required to record and report extensive environmental data, so may as well use this information to create robust and credible green claims. Being used to strict rules on making health claims, consumer healthcare firms are in a good position to embrace and even benefit from this new framework, Stephenson also points out.
Ahead of a soon to be released 10-Year Health Plan for the English NHS, an alliance including PAGB calls for self-care to be “clearly recognised and supported through concrete policies that reflect its vital role in achieving the plan’s goals.”
“It’s quite likely [consumer wearable manufacturers] are changing the sensitivity and specificity based on consumer feedback, but not for medical reasons,” said Dipak Kotecha, a University of Birmingham professor of cardiology. Often, self-reported performance evidence from manufacturers is “low quality and biased.”
At a recent plenary session the European Parliament adopted a resolution calling on the European Commission to “conduct a new and comprehensive assessment” of the impact of the revised Urban Wastewater Treatment Directive on the pharmaceutical sector.
Germany’s Federal Institute for Risk Assessment says that there is "no evidence that people with androgenetic alopecia have special dietary needs or a special nutrient requirement.”
Germany’s Federal Institute for Risk Assessment says that there is "no evidence that people with androgenetic alopecia have special dietary needs or a special nutrient requirement.”
AESGP, MedTech Europe and other associations representing medtech companies including manufacturers of self-care devices call for such products to be included in European Commission proposals for “zero-for-zero” trade in industrial goods between Europe and the US.