Malta Independent

Malta working with nine EU countries to share medicinal price informatio­n

- ■ Albert Galea

Malta is working with Italy and 8 other European countries to lay the groundwork for a formal European Union framework in which members could voluntaril­y share informatio­n about medicines prices, in order to advance more coherent pricing policies in regional markets, Health Minister Chris Fearne has said.

The 10 countries, which have come together to form what is being term as the “Valletta Group” are among the first worldwide to band together on practical steps to implement the aims of the landmark World Health Assembly resolution approved in May, calling for greater price transparen­cy in medicines markets.

Fearne said that he expects Croatia – which is one of the ten aforementi­oned countries – to put the issue on the agenda of the European Employment, Social Policy, Health and Consumer Affairs Council [EPSCO] sometime next year, after it assumes the EU presidency. Fearne delivered a keynote address at the opening session of the European Health Forum, which is focusing on new policies and technologi­es which can positively transform health systems

Fearne told Health Policy Watch that the first step for the Valletta group would likely be an agreement to confidenti­ally share informatio­n on the prices that they pay for medicines and other health products, so as to begin building trust towards collective negotiatio­ns on regional prices for bulk purchases.

Malta played host to a ministeria­l meeting of between the countries in the group in July, which mandated a group of technical experts to come back to the ministers with a firm proposal for moving ahead on a collaborat­ive framework for price informatio­n-sharing, which could also be advanced before the European Health Council.

The group of ten countries includes Ireland, Portugal, Spain, Cyprus, Greece, Slovenia, and Romania, along with Malta, Croatia and Italy.

Fearne told Health Policy Watch that a European legal framework is needed to empower countries to buck the non-disclosure agreements that are the standard of practice now, and which critics say have led to large disparitie­s in prices paid for the same drug in neighbouri­ng European countries.

“One country is paying €15,000 and another country can’t pay €100,000. Why can’t we all buy it at 15 000? The company is still making money,” he said, adding that he was referring to a specific drug that Malta procures, but he could not cite the name due to the NDAs that are currently in place.

“The pharmaceut­ical companies, when they enter into agreements for procuring medicine, specifical­ly state that you are not at liberty to publicize the price,” he added. “They usually release the medicines first in countries where there is a high GDP, and so when they [publicly] reference the price, they are referencin­g the high end of the European market.”

The Valletta Group ministers are due to meet soon again in Rome, to consider the proposals of the technical group, and see if they can form a unified position to submit to the Health Council [EPSCO].

Fearne said that in his opinion, “the next step is to agree between us to share prices between us confidenti­ally, not publicly. That will enable us to start trusting each other, when we come together to negotiate jointly. So in our case, instead of having a market of half a million, the Valletta Group is made up of 163 million; if we negotiate collective­ly then we have a stronger bargaining power.

”But because we have always been told that we get the best prices, amongst us there are people who don’t believe that negotiatin­g jointly is going to be beneficial. The only way to break this is to make prices known, and then we will realise the inevitable truth that most of us are paying very high prices. Breaking this secrecy will allow member states to build trust and then will be able to negotiate jointly.”

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