Industry Blog

Use of generic medicines plans to save money..

The proposals of an increase to make generic medicines in primary care cheaper have been set out of England.

Generic Medicines are less cost effective than a branded equivalent and the Department of health is keen to use them.

Many suggestions contain establishing a list of products for replacement and another list of items that would be excused.

The proposals will be made known for public consultation over the next 3 months. The NHS spends around £9bn a year on branded prescription medicines in the UK.

A 5 year voluntary agreement negotiated between government and the pharmaceutical industry last year, includes measures aimed at reducing NHS expenses on branded medicines by an average of 5% a year over the lifetime of the plan.

Generic medicines - which have to include the same active ingredient as the branded originals, and can be sold once the originator’s patent protection has expired - can save substantial costs.

Currently, around 83% of prescriptions issued by the NHS are for generic drugs, but ministers want this to rise by around 5%.

A quarter of heart patients don’t take their pills

At least a fourth of cardiac patients don’t take medicines prescribed to prevent heart attacks and strokes, a new study says.

The study results suggest that doctors need to pay more attention to the way patients take their medicines in line with recommendations in recent National Institute for Health and Clinical Excellence (NICE) guidance.

In a study of 472 heart patients registered with general practitioners, 29 percent failed to take drugs to prevent strokes and heart attacks regularly enough. And 23 percent missed doses of statins to reduce their cholesterol.

Women were slightly more likely to take their medicines on schedule than men, as were older patients and those taking larger numbers of medicines, said a Royal Pharmaceutical Society (RPS) release.

“Simply prescribing a drug is not enough. Doctors and other members of the primary care team, such as pharmacists, need to work with patients so they understand the importance of taking their medicines in the right dose, at the right time,” concluded Wasim Baqir, pharmacologist from The Village Green Surgery, Sunderland.

These findings were presented at the RPS’ annual event, the British Pharmaceutical Conference in Manchester.

www.sindhtoday.net

‘Pharma companies aren’t profiteering’

Drug costs are regularly criticised as being too high - and the pharmaceutical industry attacked for not making them cheaper. But David Fisher, commercial director for the Association of the British Pharmaceutical Industry, says companies are unfairly attacked.

No one can fail to be moved by the experiences of cancer patients who are literally dying for the latest medicines.
My own father succumbed to cancer in 1993, and everyone who has been through that experience knows how patients and families are desperate for any help which will provide them with hope for the future.
But tough decisions have to be made - by the National Institute for Health and Clinical Excellence (the NHS drugs watchdog), NHS executives and patients and their families who wonder if they should use up their life savings paying for medicines which have been rejected by NICE.
 
 
Vilified
 
The pharmaceutical industry, the people who discover and make the medicines which can add precious months and years to the lives of terminally-ill cancer patients, face a different kind of angst.
They risk millions upon millions of pounds in order to find new medicines to treat people who are sick and dying and for whom there is currently no treatment.
The odds of success are almost “impossible”.
If they are successful, the companies have to make enough money to recoup their investment and then fund increasingly expensive research and development in order to find the medicines of the future
 
In the process, they are often vilified as profiting from ill-health.
As an executive within the pharmaceutical industry, I want to stand up for my colleagues.
There is often concern about the price of medicines and their cost to the NHS in relation to the other calls on its £100 billion budget.
Department of Health figures show that 12% of total NHS expenditure goes on medicines, yet it sometimes feels like this is the area which gets all the attention.
We are fortunate in the UK, that the existence of a national health service allows us to “pool” or share our risk (or cost).
This means that we can balance the high cost of some medicines, particularly those for rare diseases, against the lower cost for the majority of medicines.
‘Significant hurdles’
It is the Department of Health’s (DH) role to control prices, and this is done by what is known as the Pharmaceutical Price Regulation Scheme (PPRS).
In short, this limits the profit that pharmaceutical companies can make and the department has the ability to implement periodic price cuts.
The price of medicines in the UK has been reduced by 7% in 2005, a further 3.9% this year, and will decrease by a further 1.9% next year.
Each 1% reduction in the price of branded medicines saves the NHS roughly £80m per year.
Under this scheme companies are in theory free to set prices for some new medicines when they are first licensed, but NICE sets significant hurdles for prices.
Prices in the UK are amongst the lowest in Europe, and we spend far less on medicines than our European neighbours.
Revlimid, a treatment for bone marrow cancer, was a good example (and there are others) where manufacturers have shown flexibility in pricing in the UK, despite the fact that the same medicines are widely available to patients elsewhere in Europe and often at higher prices.
No-one is arguing that pharmaceutical companies should not demonstrate the value for money which their medicines deliver so that NHS can strike the right balance. That is perfectly proper.
But when it comes to considering the balance to be struck, we need to remember that recent price cuts have contributed billions to NHS savings, and in comparison to other countries where new medicines are often more readily available to patients, UK prices are low, total spend is low, and the cost per prescription is low and falling.

U.S. Pharmaceutical Distribution Examined in New URCH Report.

Today, URCH Publishing launches a comprehensive new report covering the distribution of medicines in the United States. “Pharmaceutical Distribution in the US - Current and Future Perspectives” shows how the US pharmaceutical wholesale sector has witnessed a rapid wave of consolidation to reach its current concentrated form dominated by three major full-line companies, namely Cardinal Health Inc., McKesson Corporation and AmerisourceBergen Corporation. Known collectively as the ‘Big Three’, these companies now account for between 90% and 95% of revenue within the sector.

Over 100 buyouts have taken place since 1980, and at least 57 have occurred over the past decade, but despite their dominance of the market the Big Three continue to look for further acquisitions, and market conditions favour a trend towards further consolidation, notes the report. However, the dominance of the Big Three has persuaded the Federal Trade Commission to re-examine their activities. Although there is no evidence of any gross violations, there is the potential for the market to be distorted as a result of the activities of these companies.

www.businesswire.com

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