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Medsafe, the New Zealand Medicines and Medical Devices Safety Authority, is the medical regulatory body run by the New Zealand Ministry of Health, administering the Medicines Act 1981 and Medicines Regulations 1984. [1] Medsafe employs approximately 60 staff members in two offices.
Auckland CBD contains New Zealand's largest concentration of multi-story commercial buildings and businesses The Kinleith Mill, part of the forestry sector in New Zealand The Tiwai Point Aluminium Smelter, opened in 1971. This is a list of notable companies based in New Zealand, a country in Oceania.
The Pharmaceutical Management Agency (Māori: Te Pātaka Whaioranga), better known as Pharmac, is a New Zealand Crown entity that decides, on behalf of Te Whatu Ora – Health New Zealand, which medicines and pharmaceutical products are subsidised for use in the community and public hospitals.
New Zealand Agency for International Development – NZAID (Nga Hoe Tuputupu-mai-tawhiti) Ministry of Health (Manatū Hauora) HealthPAC; Medsafe (New Zealand Medicines and Medical Devices Safety Authority) National Radiation Laboratory; National Health Committee; New Zealand Health Information Service
New Zealand Rural Land Company NZX: NZL: New Zealand Media and Entertainment: NZX: NZM: New Zealand [79] New Zealand Oil & Gas NZX: NZO: New Zealand [80] The New Zealand Refining Company NZX: NZR: New Zealand [81] NZX: NZX: NZX: New Zealand [82] Oceania Healthcare NZX: OCA: Smartshares Australian Top 20 ETF NZX: OZY: New Zealand [83] Precinct ...
Toll New Zealand (rolling stock and inter-island ferries) Ontrack (track and infrastructure) Formerly New Zealand Rail (1990–1995), Tranz Rail (1995–2002), Toll New Zealand (2002–2008) Kordia: 1 July 1989 Subsidiary of Television New Zealand: Formerly Broadcast Communications Limited or BCL, renamed 2006. Landcorp: 1 April 1987
Australia New Zealand Therapeutic Products Agency, as it was to be called, would replace the TGA and Medsafe, the national regulator in New Zealand. In June 2011, eight years after the original treaty, Australian Prime Minister Julia Gillard and New Zealand Prime Minister John Key signed a letter of intent, reaffirming plans to create such an ...
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