The Union Health Ministry has notified amendments to the Clinical Establishments Act, 2010, under the Jan Vishwas Act. The reforms decriminalize minor procedural non-compliances, replacing fines with penalties to ease business in healthcare.
Aims of the Reform
The reforms are aimed at promoting trust-based governance, reducing compliance burden, improving ease of doing business, and ensuring proportionate regulatory enforcement, while continuing to safeguard patient safety and the quality of healthcare services across the country, as per the Ministry.The Jan Vishwas (Amendment of Provisions) Act, 2026 rationalizes provisions across 79 Central Acts administered by 23 Ministries and Departments, it added. “In the health sector, 35 provisions across five Acts under the Ministry of Health and Family Welfare have been amended to decriminalize minor procedural non-compliances and strengthen citizen-centric regulatory practices. The amendments notified under the Clinical Establishments Act, 2010 form part of this broader reform initiative aimed at creating a more responsive and facilitative regulatory ecosystem,” it added.
Key Legislative Changes
It noted that under the amended framework, the term “fine” has been replaced with “penalty” in Sections 40, 43 and 46 of the Act, thereby shifting the enforcement framework from criminal prosecution to administrative adjudication.Section 44 has been amended to introduce graded and proportionate penalties for contraventions committed by companies, ensuring that enforcement action is commensurate with the nature and severity of the violation, it said.Further, the adjudicating authority mechanism under Section 41 has been strengthened and its scope expanded to cover proceedings under Sections 40, 43 and 44, thereby facilitating transparent, efficient and accountable enforcement, it added.
Expected Impact and Government’s Commitment
The Ministry noted that the amendments also provide for a structured adjudication process, including an opportunity of hearing before the imposition of penalties, mechanisms for recovery of penalties, and an appeal framework for aggrieved parties.”These measures are expected to encourage voluntary compliance, reduce unnecessary litigation, and ensure proportionate action in cases of minor procedural non-compliances, while maintaining regulatory oversight over clinical establishments,” as per the ministry.The notification implements the recommendations of the High-Level Committee on Regulatory Reforms and underscores the Government’s commitment to fostering a transparent, efficient and citizen-centric regulatory framework, it said.”By replacing criminal penalties for procedural lapses with a fair and balanced administrative mechanism, the reforms seek to improve the ease of doing business in the healthcare sector while preserving the highest standards of patient care, safety and accountability,” it added. (ANI)(Except for the headline, this story has not been edited by Asianet Newsable English staff and is published from a syndicated feed.)