src='https://pagead2.googlesyndication.com/pagead/js/adsbygoogle.js?client=ca-pub-2513966551258002'/> Rightways: pharmacies Infolinks.com, 2618740 , RESELLER

Pages

Share This

Deepseek https://www.deepseek.com/./深度求索 DeepSeek | 深度求索 https://askaichat.app/chat
Showing posts with label pharmacies. Show all posts
Showing posts with label pharmacies. Show all posts

Monday, June 23, 2025

Twilight years of the trade

 

Chinese medical halls slowly vanishing due to costs and demand

Quieter days: Liew checking the herbs on display at his shop in Chulia Street, George Town. —KT GOH/The Star

GEORGE TOWN: Once a popular place for people to get traditional herbs, a century-old medical hall here now stands mostly quiet with the shelves lined with jars meant more for show than trade.

“We stopped selling Chinese herbs in 2014,” said Liew Kong Choy, who has run the shop in Chulia Street for decades.

“Too expensive. The stuff from China got too costly.”

These days, Liew sells balm, oil and a few home remedies to the elderly who still walk in.

But not many do these days.

“Young people go to pharmacies now,” he said. “They don’t believe in this like their parents did.”

Now, they are vanishing. It is partly due to the escalating cost.

“Red dates, wolfberries, ginseng and most Chinese herbs have gone up by 10% to 15% over the past six months,” said Teoh Hai Wei, 43, who still runs a hall nearby.

“Some of the prices vary and depend on the season, some just follow China.”

He said supply problems and shifting demand made the trade harder to manage.

Penang wholesaler Lai Ee Li compared the business to the stock market.

“Prices change every few months,” she said. “Before Chinese New Year, they go up. After that, they drop.

“Depends on the season, what illnesses are spreading and what people think will work.”

She said demand for tiger milk mushroom increases when there’s a spike in respiratory illness. That means the price jumps in tandem.

Other items that have recently gone up include chrysanthemum, lo han guo, barley and hei ko – all rising by between 5% and 15% in bulk.

Even so, Chinese patent medicine still sells, though the numbers have been volatile.

In 2022, China exported traditional Chinese medicine worth US$54.2mil (RM230.4mil) to Malaysia – a 138% jump over the previous year.

But in 2023, the figure fell to US$32.5mil (RM138.2mil), a 40% drop.

“2022 was a surge year because people turned to traditional Chinese medicine during the Covid-19 pandemic,” said Malay­sian Chinese Medical Association president Heng Aik Teng.

“2023 was more of a correction.”

He said rising costs in China also pushed up prices and made it harder for exporters.

Demand in the region, especially in price-sensitive countries, has dropped since the pandemic.

Back in Chulia Street, Liew doesn’t talk about global trade figures.

He just sees fewer people walk past his door.

“I’m still here. But it’s not like before,” he said.

Source link


Related post:



Friday, June 28, 2024

A prescription for trouble

 


CLICK TO ENLARGE

PETALING JAYA: Curbing the sale of unregistered medical items online is still a challenge, although the Medical Device Authority (MDA) has been clamping down on distributors of these unapproved products.

Condoms and contact lenses are among the top items sold without proper registration.

Within the first six months of the year, the MDA conducted two raids in the Klang Valley area. 

ALSO READ: Experts: Avoid buying unregistered medical items

“The MDA works to ensure compliance. But challenges like unauthorised online sales still remain. The MDA has successfully resolved 19 cases since 2020.

“This year, we conducted two raiding operations in the Klang Valley area,” a spokesperson for the Health Ministry agency said when contacted.

The MDA conducts an average of four raids a year in relation to the sale of unregistered medical devices or businesses operating without a valid MDA licence.

“A total of four cases have been brought to court so far. Besides that, MDA has suspended 28 establishment licences and revoked six establishment licences for a variety of violations under Act 737 (Medical Device Act 2012),” said MDA.

Products worth RM1.5mil were seized in these operations.

The top five items seized include examination gloves, contact lenses, blood lancets, medical face masks, and condoms.

These items, said the MDA, also included those sold on ecommerce or social media platforms.

“Based on our market surveillance activities, unregistered medical devices are also found in pharmacies and convenience stores. This is because there are irresponsible distributors who are distributing unregistered medical devices without licence to pharmacies as well as convenience stores,” said the MDA.

The MDA received a total of 19,833 applications for the registration of devices. Of these 9,650, there were new registrations. A total of 18,136 applications were approved, including 9,153 new ones.

“The requirement for the registration of medical devices is stated in the Third Schedule of the Medical Device Regulations 2012,” the spokesperson said.

An approval should be obtained from MDA before medical device advertisements are published or broadcast in any medium or platform.

“Furthermore, the MDA will always monitor advertisements across all platforms from time to time to curb the sales of unregistered medical devices and unapproved advertisements,” added the spokesperson.

As unregistered medical devices are available on the market, the MDA advises the public to verify the device’s registration status before purchasing.

This can be done by keying in the registration number on the authority’s website.

When contacted, Deputy Domestic Trade and Cost of Living Minister Fuziah Salleh said the regulation of medical devices falls under the purview of MDA.

However, if a medical device is found to have fake certification, the ministry can take the necessary action under the Trademarks Act 2019.

“If the medical device (appears) to have the approval of the MDA but the MDA confirms that it doesn’t, then we can take action according to the Trade Descriptions Act 2011.

“The ministry has not received any complaints in relation to this issue to date.

“However, a joint operation can be conducted to curb this according to the jurisdiction of the respective agencies,” she said.

Source link

Related stories:

Experts: Avoid buying unregistered medical items

There’s danger in buying medical devices online

Govt urged to crack down on black market for medicines

Sexual medicines among items seized during DBKL op on business premises

Risky shortcuts to getting meds