The Borneo Post

South Korea fines Novartis over kickbacks, suspends sales of some drugs

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SEOUL: South Korea said it has fined Swiss drugmaker Novartis 200 million won ( US$ 174,937) and temporaril­y banned sales of some of its drugs for paying kickbacks to doctors in exchange for recommendi­ng the company’s drugs.

A spokeswoma­n for the Ministry of Food and Drug Safety said on Thursday the ministry levied a fine on 30 drug items and banned sales of 12 variations of 3 drug types including Alzheimer’s drug Exelon for three months.

The sales ban will be effective from March 17 through June 16, the ministry’s website showed.

Novartis Korea said in a statement sent to Reuters that it “acknowledg­es and accepts” the government’s decision. “We do not tolerate misconduct and are continuing to invest significan­t efforts to fully embed a culture of compliance throughout our Korean organizati­on,” it said.

In August last year, six former and current Novartis employees in South Korea were indicted over illegal practices to boost sales of the company’s drugs.

They were charged of “indirectly” providing doctors with rebates through medical trade publicatio­ns, a court spokesman said on Thursday, adding that six others from those publicatio­ns were indicted as well.

For example, the prosecutio­n alleged the Novartis officials had a medical publicatio­n hold a symposium for doctors and pay them “travel expenses” of up to 500,000 won ($ 438) each for participat­ing in the event, the spokesman said.

Novartis Korea, which at that time said it acknowledg­es and regrets the misconduct of certain associates, declined to comment on Thursday on details of the charges, saying trials are under way. Novartis faced numerous probes in several countries, including in the United States, where authoritie­s or whistleblo­wers accused it of bribing doctors to boost sales of pharmaceut­icals products. — Reuters

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