Business Standard

Kerala govt to buy stents for hospital supply

- VEENA MANI

The Kerala government plans to introduce a system for procuring coronary stents directly from manufactur­ers and supply them to hospitals, amid efforts by drug regulators to implement the National Pharmaceut­ical Pricing Authority’s (NPPA) order capping the device’s prices.

A stent is a mesh tube placed in arteries to improve the blood flow to the heart.

According to the NPPA order issued on February 13, the price of a bare-metal stent will be capped at ~7,260, while drug-eluting stents and biodegrada­ble stents will be priced at ~29,600 apiece, excluding taxes.

A senior official of the Kerala government said the state will “keep a buffer” of quality stents and provide it to hospitals when the latter raise the demand.

The scheme, the official added, will initially be for state-owned hospitals and subsequent­ly extended to private hospitals based on their demand.

“Once this scheme is rolled out, no hospital will be at the mercy of distributo­rs. We will procure it directly from the company,” the official said on condition of anonymity.

The state is in the process of collecting data from various quarters to assess the demand for stents in hospitals, and is likely to launch the scheme as early as April 2017, the officials said. This will be the first time a state will procure stents on behalf of hospitals.

While this scheme will ensure adequate availabili­ty of high-end stents, the state drug controller will continue to ensure that hospitals raise demand and provide coronary stents to patients.

This measure comes at a time when the Centre is trying to ensure adequate availabili­ty of high-end stents at hospitals across the country by asking manufactur­ers to update the NPPA with their manufactur­ing and distributi­on plans every week.

The Centre has made it obligatory for manufactur­ers to submit their data on a weekly basis by invoking the section 3 (i) of the Drugs Price Control Order 2013. The government invoked the order after it received complaints on shortage of highend coronary stents. The NPPA is also investigat­ing 26 hospitals on account of overchargi­ng.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from India