Thailand’s Anti-CL Health Minister Removed From Office
This article was originally published in PharmAsia News
Executive Summary
Thailand's public health minister who favors scrapping the country's compulsory-licensing law concerning drugs has been ordered out of his post by the country's Constitution Court. Minister Chaiya Sasomsup was found to have violated rules regarding outside family income ties by failing to reveal them within 30 days of taking office. Chaiya's appointment caused a controversy and led to impeachment demands because he had threatened to cancel a program of allowing generic drug makers to produce cancer and AIDS medicines still under patent protection. (Click here for more
You may also be interested in...
Japan Grants Global-First Approval To Zolbetuximab, 15 Other New Drugs
Astellas's first-in class CLDN18.2-targeting antibody receives its first approval worldwide, while crovalimab and a number of drugs for rare diseases also receive nods from regulators and are now awaiting reimbursement price-listing.
Hanmi-OCI Merger Hits Wall As Brothers Win Shareholder Vote, Board Seats
The planned merger of Korea's Hanmi Pharm Group with OCI Group hits a major speed bump as the two sons of Hanmi's founder and other candidates recommended by them secture board seats. But it remains to be seen how the Lim brothers will fulfil their ambitious promises.
Beauty Firms Using AI-Based Tools Could Be Subject To Health Privacy Laws In US States
Using AI-based programs to collect and store consumer information risks running afoul of new health privacy laws cropping up in US states. Lack of federal regulation or guidance on the issue is one of the biggest challenges for beauty firms deploying AI, according to Stacy Marcus, partner at Reed Smith LLP.