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Hong KongHealth & Environment

Patients forced to wait up to 24 months for new drugs to be approved in Hong Kong, as experts call for simpler system

Experts say there is a need to simplify the drug approval procedure, which can take 18 to 24 months compared with 60 days in Singapore

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It can take around 18 to 24 months for Hong Kong authorities to recognise a new drug. Illustration: Henry Wong
Emily Tsang

Hong Kong's medical standards are considered to be among the best in the world. Yet, doctors and patients lament one problem that can only get worse - outdated drug regulation procedures.

Patients wait far longer to gain access to innovative medicine than those in many other medical hubs because the drug regulation regime here is still based on old, rigid protocols.

A University of Hong Kong thesis published in 2013 pointed out, for example, that it takes around 18 to 24 months for the local authorities to recognise a new drug - when the same medicine can be approved in just 60 days in Singapore.

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Drug approval in Hong Kong is greatly dependent on whether a product has been given the go-ahead by international health authorities and advanced countries or regions such as the European Union (EU), and by the US Food and Drug Administration (FDA).

Read more: Anguish of Hong Kong father with rare blood disease who can only be treated by drugs costing HK$4 million a year

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