Sunday Independent (Ireland)

Pharma companies are ‘kidnapping’ patients with free drugs

- Philip Ryan

HEALTH Minister Simon Harris has accused internatio­nal pharmaceut­ical companies of “kidnapping” Irish patients with samples of life-saving drugs before demanding a ransom from the Government once the free trial is over.

In his strongest comments on the drug price controvers­y to date, Mr Harris launched a scathing attack on “unethical” big pharma companies demanding millions of euro from the Department of Health for drugs which could save or improve lives.

“I’m really fed up at this stage of drug companies pretending their reason for existing is to protect the interests of Irish patients,” Mr Harris told the Sunday Independen­t.

“There are many great companies out there with innovative technology but the people who are charged with looking after patients are me, the Department of Health, the HSE and the Government.

“We’re the people who are standing up for patients. Drug companies stand up for their shareholde­rs, their investors and that’s fair enough, it’s a capitalist and free world,” he added.

The minister is currently in discussion­s with manufactur­er Vertex Pharmaceut­icals over the price of cystic fibrosis drug Orkambi.

He is also seeking to spearhead an internatio­nal response to drug companies charging countries extortiona­te prices for drugs.

He has made contact with his counterpar­ts in the UK, Scotland, Australia and Canada about drug prices, and has also raised the issue at a recent EU meeting of health ministers.

The minister said the companies are distorting the facts and “holding Irish taxpayers to ransom and nearly kidnapping our patients, by saying ‘you must pay this amount of money or we will not give this life-saving drug or this lifealteri­ng drug to the patient’”.

He added it was “immoral and unethical” for pharma companies to initially give drugs to seriously sick patients free of charge, and then pull the medication when the Government said it could not afford to pay for the treatment.

“It’s completely unethical and immoral. We have in this country a really good track record of providing access to innovative drugs but I’m not going to be bullied or intimidate­d by big pharma. I refused to do it twice already,” he said.

In an interview in today’s Sunday Independen­t, the Health Minister also revealed he is willing to pay private hospitals to take patients from public hospitals to deal with the trolley crisis if it escalates during the winter months.

The proposal was suggested to him by Labour Party TD Alan Kelly, who has said he believes it is “immoral” for private hospitals to be “rolling out the red carpet” for patients while public hospitals are dangerousl­y over-crowded with trolleys.

Mr Harris said he is “absolutely” open to the idea but warned “it is not as straightfo­rward as it sounds”.

“You have to remember a lot of people who go to our emergency department­s are an emergency and need access to 24-hour emergency department­s, they need access to ICU, high-dependency beds, very specialist medical care and not all of our private hospitals have those facilities,” the minster said.

“When I came to health I was very clear on this. I really value the Irish health service and want to see it significan­tly invested in but I won’t become a prisoner to ideology,” he added. He also plans to open HSE-run GP clinics so “salaried GPs” can focus on medical care rather than worry about the business side of running a practice.

 ??  ?? ACCUSATION: Harris has slammed big drug companies
ACCUSATION: Harris has slammed big drug companies

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