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Hospitals Can't Force Medicine Purchases, FDA Rules
13 Jun
Summary
- Hospitals cannot mandate patients buy medicines from their pharmacies.
- FDA Commissioner Tukaram Mundhe issued a state-wide directive.
- MCOCA will now apply to illegal gutkha and pan masala traders.

In a significant move for patient rights, the Food and Drug Administration (FDA) in Maharashtra has directed all hospitals and nursing homes to cease mandatory medicine purchases from their internal pharmacies. FDA Commissioner Tukaram Mundhe stated on Friday that patients have the legal right to buy medicines from any pharmacy of their preference.
The directive primarily targets smaller healthcare facilities that have been observed insisting on patients using their specific pharmacies. One case highlighted a doctor who allegedly owned a pharmacy exclusively stocking his prescribed brands, potentially at a higher cost.
Furthermore, Mundhe announced a crackdown on the illegal gutkha and pan masala trade. Offenders will now be booked under the Maharashtra Control of Organised Crime Act (MCOCA), indicating a shift towards treating such activities as serious organized crime rather than mere food safety violations. This stricter approach aims to combat the persistent, profit-driven illegal trade of these harmful products.