I developed a Chinese medicine for treating diabetes, and obtained a patent for invention. Is it not enough to take medicine first?

I am engaged in clinical research of new Chinese medicine, and I sympathize with your invention. Now you have a pharmaceutical factory? Or a collaborator? Or declare the national drug production approval (national medicine quasi-font size) or have an outpatient clinic? These are all very important. Your patent number is still being applied for and has not been authorized. There is still a lot of work to be done. I am also a patent applicant, but I have my own company, factory production, I am a doctor, and the implementation of the patent is also very difficult. It is difficult to apply for the approval of quasi-Chinese medicine production now. Because of China's policy, many pharmaceutical companies are unwilling to research a new drug, so many generic drugs are available. I think so now. It is most cost-effective not to apply for a patent before the official declaration of Chinese medicine standard words. When applying for application materials to the State Administration of Pharmaceutical Products, it is most cost-effective to apply for an invention patent. Because of the open technology, I obtained the production approval, which produced economic benefits and I was protected. If I don't declare the production approval, I will get the invention patent, and you have to pay the patent protection fee every year. Patent application is mainly for economic benefits, not for protection. If it is for protection, it is best not to apply.