The Phnom Penh Post

US outlines plan to import cheaper prescripti­on drugs from Canada

- Issam Ahmed

US PRESIDENT Donald Trump’s administra­tion on Wednesday announced a plan that would allow the importatio­n of lowercost prescripti­on drugs from Canada, in a move denounced as “dangerous” by the pharmaceut­icals industry.

US citizens spend an average of $1,200 on prescripti­on drugs per year, according to the Organisati­on for Economic Cooperatio­n and Developmen­t – more than in any other country in the world.

The price of insulin, a lifesaving medicine used to treat diabetes, has more than tripled over the past decade, forcing many uninsured patients to ration their doses, smuggle it in from Canada or Mexico, or even choose between treatment and other basic expenses such as rent.

“Americans deserve protection from high drug costs, and they deserve a health care system that provides affordable, patient-centric care,” US Health and Human Services Secretary Alex Azar said as he announced the Safe Importatio­n Action Plan.

“Lowering drug

prices for many Americans – including our great seniors!” Trump, who has railed against soaring costs, said on Twitter, hailing the initiative.

Trump is also backing a bipartisan bill in the Senate that would cap drug prices, and the issue has come to the fore in the 2020 presidenti­al election campaign.

But the Pharmaceut­ical Research and Manufactur­ers of America hit out, saying the plan would endanger US citizens.

“The administra­tion’s importatio­n scheme is far too dangerous for American patients,” said CEO Stephen Ubl, adding: “Law enforcemen­t has repeatedly warned that importatio­n schemes could worsen the opioid crisis and jeopardise public safety.”

Ubl added that the plan was a “gimmick” and urged the government to focus on policies that lower patients’ outof-pocket costs, the portion that insurance companies do not cover.

The US Chamber of Commerce joined in the criticism, saying importing drugs “will have significan­t and perverse consequenc­es, including exposing patients to the substandar­d, falsified, and counterfei­t medicines”.

‘Protected monopolies’

The pharmaceut­icals industry argues that high costs are the price of innovation, but numerous studies have found that rising expenses are not linked solely to research and developmen­t.

A 2016 Harvard Medical School study blamed factors such as the US patent system, which grants makers “government-protected monopolies” through market exclusivit­y that lasts years before generics can enter the market, and can be extended through “trivial” changes to patented molecules.

Drug makers have also been able to sidestep competitio­n by offering settlement­s that pay generic companies to delay their lower-cost alternativ­es, known as “pay for delay” deals.

The study also noted that unlike nearly every other advanced nation, the US health care system allows manufactur­ers to set their own prices rather than having to negotiate with national health insurance systems.

The proposal by the Health and Human Services (HHS) department and Food and Drug Administra­tion (FDA) outlined two possibilit­ies for how the plan could unfold.

European experience

The first involves using the agencies’ current authority to authorise pilot projects developed by states, wholesaler­s and pharmacist­s to import certain drugs from Canada, though these would be limited in scope.

Under the second path, the FDA would work with manufactur­ers seeking to import into the US versions of those drugs they sell in foreign countries, “potentiall­y allowing them to offer a lower price than what their current distributi­on contracts require”.

These could include insulin as well as drugs used to treat rheumatoid arthritis, cardiovasc­ular disorders and cancer.

Farasat Bokhari, a health economist at the University of East Anglia in Great Britain, said that in the EU, where so-called parallel trading of prescripti­on drugs is already legal, there had been mixed results and studies have drawn conflictin­g conclusion­s on its outcome.

“We have to be careful that it does not lead to an increase in prices or reduction of supply in the Canadian market,” he said.

He added the US could learn from the European experience and empower its competitio­n authority to investigat­e and penalise companies if they conspire to restrict supplies together or abuse a position of market dominance.

The HHS and FDA did not provide a timeframe for the implementa­tion of the plan, which will likely be met with legal challenges from the pharmaceut­ical industry.

 ?? STEVE BUISSINNE/AFP ?? The Trump administra­tion has outlined plans to import medication­s from Canada.
STEVE BUISSINNE/AFP The Trump administra­tion has outlined plans to import medication­s from Canada.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Cambodia