Price regulation vs' Competition in China - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

1 / 14
About This Presentation
Title:

Price regulation vs' Competition in China

Description:

Pharmaceutical price have long been regulated in China before 1992 (actually ... The National Development and Reform Commission (NDRC) has issued nine policies ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

Number of Views:62
Avg rating:3.0/5.0
Slides: 15
Provided by: YELU
Category:

less

Transcript and Presenter's Notes

Title: Price regulation vs' Competition in China


1
Price regulation vs. Competition in China
  • Lu Ye. Ph.D Associate Professor
  • School of Public Health
  • Fudan University
  • Nov.11, 2008

2
Policies of Drug Price Control in China
  • Direct control policy
  • -- Reduction of drug price (as well as
    increase price recently)
  • -- Bulk purchasing through bidding
  • Indirect control policy
  • -- Separating accounts of drug revenue
  • expense in hospital
  • -- Capping hospital pharmaceutical revenue by
  • annual growth rate
  • -- Separation between prescribing dispensing

3
Drug Price Setting Under Planning Economy in China
Manufacturing Cost
Retail Price
Ex-factory Price
Wholesale Price
4
Policy Changes in Drug Price Setting
  • Pharmaceutical price have long been regulated in
    China before 1992 (actually before the opening up
    policy)
  • 1992-1996 let the market set drug prices
  • Recentralized the drug pricing in 1997,and drug
    price set by both government and market
  • Pricing based on average market cost of various
    drug categories (since 1998)
  • Highest retail price set by NDRC (since 1999)
  • Bulk procurement through price bidding (since
    2001)
  • Market price approach for out-of-formulary
  • Individual drug price setting for patent or some
    off-patent drugs with public hearing (on needed
    basis)

5
The National Development and Reform Commission
(NDRC) has issued nine policies on drug pricing
since 2000
  • Set maximum retail prices for medicines based on
    a mark up above the average production cost
    declared by manufacturers, medicines include
  • -the essential drug list (actually the BMI
    reimbursement list)
  • -some special drugs such as innovative brand
    , family planning and immunization (EPI vaccines)
  • -controlled medicines ( narcotics,
    Psychological medicines )
  • All other drug prices are market based

6
Principles of the Policy
  • 1?Offering good medical services with low cost
  • 2?Government control combining with market
    mechanism

7
Differences Between NEDL NDL
Year 2000 Revise1/2year New drug 1/year
NEDL Central Government Level SFDA
2000.5 Revise1/2year New drug 1/year
NDL Central Government Level Ministry of Labour
and Social Security
List A 327 Western Drugs 135 TCM
List B 586 Western Drugs 440 TCM
15 adjustment
Prov.IDL B
8
Role of Government in Price Control
  • Setting the highest retail price of all drugs in
    national basic medical insurances reimbursement
    list, including prescription drug and
    over-the-counter drug
  • Bulk procurement through price bidding, then,
    adjust retail price generally three months later
  • Originator drug is allowed to be priced
    separately
  • Three tired pricing policy
  • Patented innovators
  • Branded generics
  • General generics

9
Summary of price resetting of listed drugs from
1997 to 2007
10
Effect of cut down selected medicines price
  • Regulated price decreases appear to have had
    limited effect in controlling health spending
    growth,
  • -controlling retail drug prices was not an
    effective way to contain drug expenditures
    (quantity not contained)
  • - many local company remove low priced
    products from the market
  • (among 1,500 essential medicines defined by
    the SFDA, one third of them
  • could not be seen in the pharmaceutical
    market in Beijing
  • of those not available in Beijing, some
    30 of the products are no longer produced by any
    Chinese pharmaceutical manufacturers)
  • - manufacturers register new drugs with new
    formulation/dosage form/packaging

11
The higher the medicine can get priced, the more
likely it would be produced by the manufacturers
  • Contributing factors
  • -low prices not profitable
  • -competing newer drugs
  • -perverse incentives in health systems prefer to
    buy higher margin (high price) drugs
  • -problems in the distribution system (multi-tired
    distribution and mark-up)
  • -no coordination between drug regulatory
    authority and pricing authority

12
Bulk purchasing through bidding(hospital
tendering)
  • Tender purchasing is established as the main
    channel for most of the drugs used in hospitals
  • Tenders are commonly issued on an annual basis
    and increasingly cover a large number of
    hospitals, often on a provincial basis
  • The bidding process differs among the provinces

13
The problem of bidding system
  • The potential volume of business covered by
    tenders places more pressure on companies to win
    the bid since the stakes are higher than ever.
  • Even winning a bid does not automatically
    guarantee that a product will be sold since
    hospitals retain the right to decide whether they
    will buy a particular drug.
  • Remove products whose prices had been cut from
    the bidding process.
  • The bidding system has failed to provide any
    benefits to patients.

14
Solutions
  • For effectively controlling rapid growth of drug
    expenditures,
  • Developing appropriate incentives for service
    providers to improve rational use of medicines
  • Introduction of drug list in health insurance
    scheme
  • Eliminating incentives for doctors to prescribe
    drugs of high price but not more cost-effective
  • Enforcement of price regulation
Write a Comment
User Comments (0)
About PowerShow.com