Weekend Herald

Seymour ponders new prescripti­on for drug agency

Associate Health Minister talks ‘out of the box’ plans for Pharmac

- Nicholas Jones

David Seymour, the minister responsibl­e for Pharmac, wants to allow the drug-buying agency to secure more money by showing how funding medicines would save the Government money overall.

That major reform should happen this term, said Seymour, the Associate Health Minister. He expects it could, over time, greatly boost New Zealand’s spending on medicines.

New Zealand spends less than a third of what other countries spend on medicines, after accounting for population size and GDP.

This strangles the supply of new drugs that are standard care in comparable countries, causing early death and misery.

Blood cancer drug funding

That is the case for multiple myeloma medicines, for example. No new drugs for the common blood cancer have been funded for a decade, and patients miss out on proven medicines that would keep them alive and healthy for years longer.

Seymour spoke of his sadness at reading a Herald article about the West Auckland family of Simon Clark, who collect cans to sell as scrap to fundraise for a drug, daratumuma­b, he needs to stay alive.

“It’s an incredible story of what people are prepared to do. On the other hand, it’s not the kind of story you want to see in New Zealand.

“As the person responsibl­e in government, I’d love to march down to Pharmac and tell them to just fund the poor guy’s drugs.

“But I also know the minute I do that I’ve blown up the whole model [in which politician­s have no say over funding decisions], and it would be unfair on a bunch of other people whose conditions could actually be just as bad or worse.”

It was essential to guard against politician­s influencin­g Pharmac decisions, Seymour said.

However, he wants to change some of the rules Pharmac has to work by.

The agency was establishe­d in 1993 when government finances were dire, he said, and had been “very successful” getting bang for limited buck, including in negotiatio­ns with drug companies.

“However, I think there are other questions like, ‘can we actually get better value for New Zealand as a whole if we spend more money on pharmaceut­icals?”’

As an example, a couple of years ago he attended Camp Purple, an event for young people with inflammato­ry bowel disease, and learnt some attendees had repeated surgeries which could have been avoided with a drug, ustekinuma­b.

“The Government at that time would fund multiple operations, often removing much of a kid’s intestine, ultimately leading them to require a colostomy bag. And yet they wouldn’t fund the drug that could save that.”

Ustekinuma­b was funded in December 2022, “but I think we could have got there faster”.

How Pharmac changes could work

Seymour has asked officials to investigat­e ways Pharmac could make a budget bid to the finance minister, detailing expected “whole of Government” savings, while also keeping the minister and other politician­s in the dark as to what the drug is, to protect from possible political interferen­ce.

“That’s the challenge. But that’s the challenge we’re taking on . . . we’ve got a few ideas.”

Robust analysis would be done on whether promised savings eventuated, and that track record would influence future bids, he said.

He also wants considerat­ion of other “out of the box” changes in the system, including cost-sharing arrangemen­ts — where Pharmac or a drug company would share the cost of a drug with the patient — and enticing more clinical trials here.

There will be no record increase for Pharmac in this year’s Budget, he said, because big increases under Labour weren’t funded into the future. “That does give us really tough choices” about spending increases, he said, but Pharmac’s budget wouldn’t drop.

Before the election, National pledged to introduce ring-fenced funding for 13 cancer treatments that are available in Australia.

Seymour said that commitment remained, but what was included could change if the Cancer Control Agency updated its assessment.

Pharmac’s culture and leadership

Last November Seymour told reporters the culture at Pharmac needed to improve, in the wake of controvers­y over chief executive Sarah Fitt’s involvemen­t in internal emails about broadcaste­r and patient advocate Rachel Smalley.

Asked if he had confidence in Fitt, Seymour said he did, but such appointmen­ts were made by Pharmac’s board. A new chair would be announced soon and new members appointed by the end of the year.

“I don’t want to go over the top of the board. Otherwise, why have one?”

 ?? Photo / Michael Craig ?? David Seymour wants to change some of the rules Pharmac must work by.
Photo / Michael Craig David Seymour wants to change some of the rules Pharmac must work by.

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