Title: Pricing and paying for medicines
1Pricing and paying for medicines
- Ad Antonisse
- AstraZeneca BV
- April 2005
2Content
- The Netherlands compared to other EU countries
- What is the issue with medicines?
- How does the Dutch system work
- G10, OECD, WHO and US
- How to solve the problem
3Costs of medicines( total healthcare - OECD)
4Consumption of medicines(/inh. - OECD)
5Consumption of healthcare( GDP - OECD)
6Consumption of medicines( GDP - OECD)
7Consultations with prescription( - OECD)
8Delivery of medicines (SFK)
9Price index medicines(1996 100)
10Whats the issue?
- Low prescription of medicines
- Low consumption of medicines
- High generic substitution
- Average prices with decreasing trend
- Increasing amount of regulations
- KNMG (March 2005)
- Often VWS proposes new regulations and policies
in medicines on cost containment and safety,
which are not always in line with each other
11The Dutch system
- GVS list 1A
- Clustering based on broad population/indication
- Price based on / DDD
- Product form not of importance
- GVS list 1B
- Therapeutic added value for broad population
against golden standard - Free pricing based on FE
12This is the issue!
- All products priced on 1A limit
- No incentive for innovation in product form
- No incentive for innovation for sub group
- No incentive for incremental innovation
- Long negotiations for 1B products
13Incremental innovation
14Recommendations G10(May 2002)
- Rec 2 improve the introduction to the market,
in particular for innovative medicines. - Rec 3 improving time taken between granting of
MA and pricing and reimbursement decisions. - Rec 4 Competitive generic market
- Rec 6 Price regulation only for those products
purchased by or reimbursed by the State - Rec 7 Development of HTA including cost
effectiveness - Rec 10 Information to patients
15OECD - Health Project(2004)
- Pag 105 Socially optimally prices need to take
into account not only the value of the specific
medicine, but also the costs of research and
development, if future innovation is to be
sustained. - Pag 106 such (reference pricing) systems may
reduce incentives for innovation.
16OECD - Health Project(2004)
- Facilitating availability and use of generic
alternatives can avert these negative effects by
fostering price competition at the level of the
molecule, rather than the therapeutic class. - Employ pharmaceutical pricing systems and other
policies that reward cost-effective choices among
similar medications and encourage truly novel
innovation in the pharmaceutical sector.
17WHO priority medicines(November 2004)
- Pharmaceutical innovation in Europe could be
improved through reforms of regulatory and
pricing policies - Therapeutics can be improved through the
development of improved pharmaceutical delivery
mechanisms - Pharmaceutical innovation should also encompass
special interest groups of patients
18U.S. Department of Commerce (December 2004)
- As OECD countries individually seek to reduce
spending on drugs through price controls, their
collective actions reduce RD that would provide
substantial health benefits to all. - Relaxation of foreign price controls, if coupled
with appropriate reform of foreign generic
markets, could potentially bring about much of
these gains from the flow of new drugs, even
without foreign spending on prescription drugs. - the increased revenues from decontrolling drug
prices in OECD countries would, all things being
equal, yield on average 2.7 to 4.1 new drugs per
year.
19How to maintain integrated care
- See medicines as part of total health care
- See medicines (and health care) as investment and
not as costs - Value innovation in healthcare, also incremental
and also in product form or sub group - Use HTA to value healthcare and the components
- Make market access fast and without unneeded
administration
20If you think healthcare is expensive, try
disease