Transformation of the Ukrainian pharmaceutical market – new opportunities and potential Pharmaceutical Industry Review, September No 4 (97) 2023
5 minutes with... Maryna Slobodnichenko, Deputy Minister of Health of Ukraine for European Integration
https://www.linkedin.com/in/maryna- slobodnichenko-a361aa221/
Maryna Slobodnichenko / Марина Слободніченко, Deputy Minister of Health of Ukraine for European Integration / заступник Міністра охорони здоров'я з питань європейської інтеграції
Almost six months ago you started your work as Deputy Minister of Health of Ukraine for European Integration. A lot has already been done during in such a short time, but there is still a lot to be done. Please tell our readers more about the roadmap for adapting Ukraine's current healthcare legislation to the requirements of EU
directives and regulations. What is the current stage of its development and implementation?
On 30 June, we completed a serious stage of work – a self-analysis of the level of compliance of national healthcare legislation with European acts. Initially, we identified about 600 acts that the
Ministry of Health had to analyze, but in the course of the review, the number of acts increased to more than 1500. In general, the results of the self- screening were pleasing. We have seen a positive trend: 319 EU acts require mandatory implementation, of which 43 directives and regulations have already been fully implemented into national legislation as part of the implementation of the Association Agreement, and another 60 are currently in progress. This means that more than 30% of EU law is already part of Ukrainian healthcare regulation. We have divided the entire array of EU acts into four groups in order to systematize them: public health, pharmaceutical regulation, medical services, and education. The largest number of directives and regulations that have not been implemented in Ukrainian legislation at all belong to the public health system. It is worth
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