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EMA urges patients to beware of potential falsified medicines sold by unregistered websites and vendors. To stay safe when buying medicines online, look out for the logo. The logo is clickable and will appear on the websites of all online medicine retailers in the EU that are registered with their national regulatory authority. Clicking on the logo will take you to the register of online retailers of the country where the retailer is established and registered, corresponding to the flag displayed on the logo. Once there, check that the retailer is listed. The national flag and the text are an integral part of the logo. A logo that displays the EU flag, for example, is not authentic. When you buy medicines from unregistered sources you are at greater risk of purchasing falsified medicines. These medicines may not have passed through the usual rigorous evaluation processes that ensure that a medicine is fit for the EU market. As a result, these medicines may not work or may be harmful. The consequences of taking falsified medicines can be serious for patients and may include:. The Directive obliges Member States to conduct and promote information campaigns on:. To support this effort, the Commission provides Member States with information and communication materials to be used as such or adapted for national campaigns. Buying medicines online. In the European Union EU , it is possible to buy medicines online. Patients should only buy medicines from online retailers registered with the national competent authorities in the EU Member States, to reduce the risk of buying sub-standard or falsified medicines. The European Commission has introduced a common logo that appears on the websites of these registered retailers. Human Veterinary Regulatory and procedural guidance. Page contents Look out for the logo Dangers of falsified medicines List of registers of online medicine retailers Legal framework Related EU legislation Related content External links Topics. Look out for the logo. Do not continue with your purchase if the retailer is not on the list. Dangers of falsified medicines. Falsified medicines may: contain ingredients of low quality or in the wrong doses; be deliberately and fraudulently mislabelled with respect to identity or source; have fake packaging, wrong ingredients, or low levels of active ingredients. The consequences of taking falsified medicines can be serious for patients and may include: the disease being untreated or treatment failure; unexpected or severe side effects; dangerous interactions with medicines the patient is already taking. List of registers of online medicine retailers. EU Member State Register of online retailers. Legal framework. By 1 July Member States have to ensure that the legal provisions on the common logo are applied in their country; national regulatory authorities in the EU are obliged to list all registered online medicine retailers in their country on their websites; all online medicines retailers registered in the EU should display the logo. The Directive obliges Member States to conduct and promote information campaigns on: the dangers of falsified medicines, the risk of medicinal products supplied illegally online, and the functioning of the common logo for online sales of medicinal products. Related content Falsified medicines. Topics Regulatory and procedural guidance. Back to top.
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If you are travelling to a Schengen country and want to take medicines with you that fall under the Opium Act, you will need to have a Schengen certificate. If you are travelling to a country outside the Schengen area, you will need a medical certificate. If you take these medicines with you without going through the necessary procedures, you may be in violation of local law and risk a severe penalty. So you should always ask the embassy of the country that you are travelling to what the local requirements are. These only list the active ingredients, or international non-proprietary name INN. Sleeping pills and drugs to reduce anxiety are on List II. If you or your child is travelling to a Schengen country with medicines that fall under the Opium Act, you will need a Schengen certificate. The Schengen certificate is valid for 30 days. If you are going away for more than 30 days, you must have multiple, successive Schengen certificates. If you are going to be passing through Schengen countries to a destination outside the Schengen area, you will only need a medical certificate, written in English. The medical certificate is also valid in the Schengen countries. The CAK website explains what the procedure is for each country. Allow up to 4 weeks for your application to be processed. Contact the CAK or go to their website in Dutch if you or your underage child is travelling to a country outside the Schengen area and need to take medicines with you that fall under the Opium Act. They will tell you what procedure you must follow for the country you are visiting in order to obtain a medical certificate. In most cases, you will need a medical certificate drawn up in English and which is valid for one year. To obtain this certificate you must:. You can see a sample medical certificate on the CAK website. If you are travelling to a country that is party to the Apostille Convention , you can have your medical certificate legalised with an apostille stamp. Countries set their own rules and requirements, so it is always a good idea to contact the embassy of the country that you are travelling to. They can tell you whether you need a medical certificate for your specific medication. When you are travelling, it can be useful to have a medication passport stating what medicines you use and other key medical information such as drug allergies. This is useful information if you need new medicines or visit a doctor abroad. However the medication passport is not a travel document. It does not replace the Schengen certificate or the legalised, English-language medical certificate. You can get a medication passport from your family doctor, pharmacy, consultant, or other medical service provider. The medication passport is sometimes referred to as the European Medical Passport. When you go abroad, keep your medicines in their original packaging. This makes it clear to foreign officials that the drugs are medicines, not illegal drugs. You can bring most medicines with you to the Netherlands as long as you can prove that they are for your own use. You should however follow the rules for bringing medicines with you. Medicines that have a narcotic effect are listed in the Opium Act. You can only bring them into the Netherlands if you have an official certificate. If you require a certificate for your medicines, check whether it needs to be legalised. Check with the local authorities of your country of departure what the requirements are for taking medication with you. For more information about travelling with medication see the CAK website. Search within English part of Government. Can I take my medication abroad?
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