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Why Medicine Labelling Controls Matter for GDP Compliance

Foreign-Labelled Stock and Missing Leaflet Information: Why Medicine Labelling Controls Matter

The MHRA Safety Roundup for April 2026 included several updates involving medicine packaging, labelling and product information.

These included interim supply of foreign-labelled or USA-labelled stock, blister strips with Spanish labelling, missing safety information in a Patient Information Leaflet, and recalls or notifications linked to packaging and information issues.

For patients and healthcare professionals, this kind of information helps ensure medicines are used safely and correctly.

For medicines wholesale businesses, it is also a practical reminder:

Product information control matters.

What Happened and Why It Matters

The April MHRA Safety Roundup summarised Direct Healthcare Professional Communications and medicine recalls or notifications issued during the month.

Some examples involved interim supply arrangements to manage disruption, including foreign-language or USA-labelled stock. Other updates involved missing or incorrect information in leaflets, cartons, blister strips or packaging.

This matters because medicines are not just physical products.

The information around the medicine also matters.

The label, leaflet, carton, batch information, route of supply, communication and records all help the supply chain understand what the product is, how it should be handled, and what users or healthcare professionals need to know.

If information is unclear, incomplete or not properly communicated, risk increases.

What This Means for Medicines Wholesale Businesses

For businesses involved in medicines wholesale, GDP compliance is often thought about in terms of storage, temperature control and transport.

Those areas are important.

But GDP is wider than that.

Official MHRA guidance explains that GDP requires medicines to be obtained from the licensed supply chain and consistently stored, transported and handled under suitable conditions, as required by the marketing authorisation or product specification.

That means businesses need systems that support the whole route.

This includes:

  • Checking what stock is being received.
  • Understanding whether any special communication applies.
  • Knowing whether stock is foreign-labelled or has interim supply conditions.
  • Ensuring customers receive the right information.
  • Keeping records that explain what happened.
  • Escalating issues when packaging or information concerns arise.
  • Making sure the Responsible Person has visibility.

Why Labelling and Product Information Controls Matter

A medicine’s packaging and leaflet are not just presentation details.

They support safe use, correct identification, traceability and communication.

For a wholesaler or distribution business, weak controls may lead to problems such as:

  • Stock being supplied without the right accompanying information.
  • Teams not recognising special supply conditions.
  • Customers being unclear on what has changed.
  • Records not showing what was supplied and why.
  • The Responsible Person not being sighted early enough.
  • SOPs failing to explain how these cases should be handled.
  • Customer queries being managed inconsistently.

These issues can look small at first, but they can quickly become serious if the business cannot evidence control.


Why This Matters for Responsible Person Oversight

The Responsible Person should have visibility over GDP risks that affect the quality system.

That includes situations where stock is supplied under interim arrangements, foreign-labelled packaging is used, product information changes, or customer communication is needed.

The Responsible Person does not need to personally do every task.

But the system should make it clear:

  • Who checks product information?
  • Who reviews special supply notices?
  • Who confirms customer communication?
  • Who records the decision?
  • Who escalates concerns?
  • Who checks completion?
  • Who reviews whether the process worked?

If those answers are unclear, the quality system may not be strong enough.

What Businesses Should Check Now

If your business is involved in medicines wholesale, WDA(H) readiness, specialist distribution or ongoing GDP compliance, this is a good time to review your labelling and product information controls.

Start with these checks:

  • Review how product information updates are received and logged.
  • Check how foreign-labelled or interim supply stock is identified.
  • Review whether SOPs explain what staff should do.
  • Check whether customers receive the right information when needed.
  • Review whether supplier communications are stored and traceable.
  • Check whether Responsible Person oversight is clear.
  • Review how packaging, leaflet or labelling issues are escalated.
  • Check whether records can show what action was taken.
  • Review whether staff understand what to do when stock information is unusual.

These checks are not about making the process difficult.

They are about making sure the business can explain, evidence and control its route.

How Stag Global Helps

Stag Global does not supply medicines or products.

We support businesses with compliance-led review and readiness support.

This may include:

  • GDP quality system review
  • Responsible Person / GDP quality support
  • SOP and documentation control review
  • Supplier and customer communication review
  • Recall and notification readiness
  • WDA(H) application readiness
  • Ongoing compliance support
  • Compliance route reviews

Our role is to help businesses understand whether their systems are clear, practical and ready to support regulated activity.

We help clients identify what is working, what may be missing and what needs strengthening.

Final Thought

Medicine labelling, packaging and product information may look like small details.

They are not.

They are part of how the supply chain protects safe, controlled and traceable supply.

For medicines wholesale businesses, the key question is simple:

Can you show that product information issues are identified, communicated, recorded and controlled properly?

If the answer is unclear, now is the time to review your system.

Need clarity on your GDP quality systems, product information controls or Responsible Person oversight?

Book a confidential consultation with Stag Global to review your position before small gaps become bigger compliance issues.

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Across every sector, the same problems show up: unclear ownership, inconsistent supplier control, and evidence that can’t stand up when scrutiny lands.

TPMG brings clarity first, then control, then audit-defensible proof, so decisions are easier, compliance is calmer, and governance is credible.

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