- The regulatory framework for advertising therapeutic goods
- Reforms to the regulatory framework for complementary medicines – assessment pathways
- Options for the future regulation of “low-risk” products
- Draft List of Permitted Indications
- Therapeutic Goods Advertising Code
See also:
- Australian patients vulnerable to quacks
- Chemist Warehouse-Swisse-Voost AFL grand final promotion kicked
- Regulation of complementary medicines
- New complementary medicine health claims lack evidence, so why are they even on the table?
- Kid’s vitamin gummies: unhealthy, poorly regulated and exploitative
- Which supplements work? New labels may help separate the wheat from the chaff
- Dodgy claims for complementary medicines? Here’s how the drug watchdog could have more bite
- Don’t believe the hype – your complementary medicines are unlikely to deliver
- Krill oil marketing: a case study of Australia’s broken regulations
- Regulations around food-medicine products fail to protect consumers
- Kids Smart’s dumb ads: consumers complain of misleading claims
- TGA, once again, fails to reign in shonky weight-loss product
- Swisse Vitamins highlights the failure of industry self-regulation
- New weight-loss claims show TGA reforms aren’t working
- Pharmacies to push supplements as ‘Fries and Coke’ to prescriptions
- SensaSlim banned after medico’s exposure of bogus scientific claims
And an old but still relevant article:




