china
China tightens grip on pharma supply chains
China has become a full-scale peer to the U.S. in drug development, now running more clinical trials each year. And with its new Decree 834, it’s making clear that it plans to protect and weaponize that position, opines Dennis Kwok, a former member of the Hong Kong Legislative Council and a strategic adviser specializing in China risk and geopolitical advice.
The law gives Beijing sweeping authority to investigate and punish foreign pharma companies whose decisions — like shifting supply chains out of China to comply with U.S. policy — are seen as undermining its industrial security, he writes. This puts Western firms in an impossible bind where following one country’s laws could violate another’s.
“By the time enforcement arrives, preparation is no longer possible,” he writes. “China is now a global drug innovation powerhouse. Beijing has equipped itself with the legal tools to hold Western access to that ecosystem hostage.”
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abortion
Court blocks mailing of abortion pill nationwide
A federal appeals court has blocked the mailing of mifepristone, forcing the drug to be dispensed in person — effectively undoing years of FDA policy that expanded telehealth access.
The ruling sides with anti-abortion arguments that mail distribution undermines state bans, even though the pill has decades of safety data and now accounts for the majority of U.S. abortions, with a significant share prescribed remotely. It’s also a striking move legally, with the court stepping into territory typically left to the FDA’s scientific judgment.
“This is going to affect patients’ access to abortion and miscarriage care in every state in the nation,” one ACLU lawyer said. “When telemedicine is restricted, rural communities, people with low incomes, people with disabilities, survivors of intimate partner violence and communities of color suffer the most.”
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