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I wonder if the drug approval number published by National Medical Products Administration has only one name? Ask experts for answers.
First of all, you can be sure that this is definitely not medicine. At first glance, Chinese food is healthy food. Health food and medicine can never be confused (one is food and the other is medicine), and health food can never replace medicine for treatment. If the other party sells this thing in the name of medicine, there is already a problem. This approval number is true and can be found on the website of the State Administration of Taxation. The name is Bao Jingsheng Jianyuan Capsule, and the producer and operator is Beijing Shengtianfang Medical Science and Technology Research Institute.

Then let's look at the name of the medicine you bought: "Wang Yao Tang Fang Combination". The naming of health food has relevant policy requirements: "Each product can only have one name, and its name consists of three parts: brand name, common name and attribute name." "Brand names and generic names should be distinguished by words or symbols. If the brand name adopts a registered trademark, it can be marked in the upper right corner after the registered trademark name. ), or followed by the word "brand"; If a registered trademark is not adopted, if the application for registration is not approved, the word "brand" shall be added after the trademark name. " And the name of the medicine you bought does not meet this requirement. Is Wang Yao a trademark? If so, what's behind? This sign? If not, then it should be called the medical trump card. Not to mention the middle Tang, the final combination is obviously not an attribute name.

Secondly, is it the same as the manufacturer, or is the manufacturer not indicated on the package at all?

Then there is the requirement for the instructions: "The food that claims to have a specific health care function must not cause acute, subacute or chronic harm to the human body, and its labels and instructions must not involve the functions of disease prevention and treatment, and the content must be true, and it should specify the suitable population, unsuitable population, functional components or symbolic components and their contents; The function and composition of the product must be consistent with the label and instructions. " Does the content in the manual meet these requirements?

Personally, I think it is very likely that this Dongdong is neither a medicine nor a health food, but to convince buyers that some contents of the approval number and instructions of other real health foods have been used, because if it is renamed, it will be updated on the website of the Food and Drug Administration, so that it will not be found, not to mention that the name does not meet the naming requirements, unless the name change is generally not approved under special circumstances.