New Straits Times

Ceiling price for drugs may affect private sector, says hospital group

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KUALA LUMPUR: The government’s implementa­tion of a ceiling drug price would affect the private healthcare sector, said the Associatio­n of Private Hospitals Malaysia (APHM).

Its president, Datuk Dr Kuljit Singh, said the private medical sector would need to find an avenue for its direct and indirect costs. This varied across private hospitals depending on their locations, level of service and specialiti­es. “We fully support the push for greater transparen­cy and efforts to rein in medical inflation. However, this has to be thought through carefully to avoid unintended policy outcomes that would hurt Malaysia.”

Dr Kuljit said if the implementa­tion of ceiling price for medicine and drugs did not take into considerat­ion the entire healthcare financing structure, and without the involvemen­t and cooperatio­n of the players, it would ultimately cause the Malaysian private healthcare sector to collapse.

He said the medication administra­tion involved other costs, such as medication review, drug counsellin­g, compliance monitoring and titration of dosage as a patient’s condition changes.

He said APHM had met the Pharmaceut­ical Services Division to discuss the matter on Feb 28.

Health Minister Dr Dzulkefly Ahmad said the government would work with the Domestic Trade and Consumer Affairs Ministry to carry out a proposal to put in place a ceiling price on medicine.

Dr Dzulkefly said the ceiling price would refer to the average of three lowest prices, which would then be imposed at the wholesale stage and retail level at clinics, pharmacies and hospitals.

Malaysia Pharmaceut­ical Society president Amrahi Buang said the pharmaceut­ical industry would benefit from a floor price.

“For the pharmaceut­ical industry, at the retail level, having a floor price would provide an even playing field as we have three categories — independen­t, small chain and big chain pharmacies. If there were price cutting or price wars between pharmacies, then it would disrupt pharmacist­s from their real profession­al work,” he said.

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