| Literature DB >> 26981251 |
Panagiotis Petrou1, Michael A Talias1.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Financial recession mandated the introduction of harsh austerity measures. Health, and particularly pharmaceuticals, constitute a significant part of public expenditure and as such they have been subject to significant budget reduction and stringent policies. As a consequence of these measures, an increasing percentage of patients resort to private sector for acquisition of their prescribed pharmaceuticals, due to exclusion of public health care beneficiary status, reduction of breadth of national formularies, delays in reimbursement and excessive waiting times. Affordability for pharmaceuticals in the private sector is of paramount importance since household disposable income plummets and more people are prone to impoverishment. This is critical for branded products, whose active substance and trademark are under patent protection, since no alternative options exist while their monopoly status imply that their prices are high. The impact on affordability regarding access of patient to necessary pharmaceutical care has not been documented in developed countries.Entities:
Keywords: Affordability; Branded pharmaceuticals; Cyprus; Financial recession; Greece; Italy; Portugal; Spain
Year: 2016 PMID: 26981251 PMCID: PMC4792092 DOI: 10.1186/s40545-016-0057-7
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Pharm Policy Pract ISSN: 2052-3211
Importance of private sector during financial crisis
| Reasons | Countries affected |
|---|---|
| Exclusion of many patients from public health coverage | Spain, Greece, Cyprus, Portugal |
| Extended freeze of inclusion of new products in the formulary | Spain, Greece, Cyprus, Italy, Portugal |
| Exclusion of several products from formulary | Spain, Greece, Cyprus, Italy, Portugal |
| Prolonged shortages of reimbursed medicines | Spain, Greece, Italy, Portugal |
| Long waiting lists in the public sector due to austerity measures (recruitment freeze of health professionals) | Spain, Greece, Cyprus, Italy, Portugal |
Cost-containment measures implemented by selected countries
| Portugal | Greece | Spain | Cyprus | Italy | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Savings for the payer (Health System for Portugal, Greece, Spain, Italy- Private Sector’s patients in Cyprus ) | 343 million euros (−11.7 %) IN 2012 | 1 billion euro in 2012. (from €5.4 billion in 2010 to an estimated 3.5 in 2012) | 8.8 % reduction in 2011 pharmaceutical expenditure for 2011 | 8.5 % Reduction for 2015 | 25.1 billion in 2012 to $23.5 billion in 2020 – a decrease of $1.6 billion in eight years. [ |
| Pharmacists | Mark-up profit reduction | Mark-up profit reduction Introduction of Rebates/clawback | Mark-up profit reduction | Introduction of regressive mark up profit plus fee for service | Mark –up profit reduction |
| Pricing | 7 % average price cut on drugs | 25 % temporary price cuts reduction, Regular Price interventions | Lowest Price among EU | External reference pricing through one expensive, one cheap and two medium priced EU countries | Renegotiation of the prices of less effective medicines |
| Up to 30 % price reduction for medicines in 2010 | |||||
| 6 % mandatory discount in retail price for all reimbursed medicines | |||||
| 20–35 % price cut for some generics products | |||||
| 7.5 % price cut for biologics | |||||
| Generics | Incentives for generic prescribing. Priced 50 % below the RRP of the reference product, or 25 % per cent if the wholesale price is less than €10) | Obligatory generic penetration at least 40 % of medicines used in public hospitals | INN prescribing | N/A | 12.5 % reduction in the prices of generic. Generic penetration is 20 % (volume). |
| (Royal Decree 16/2012) Obligatory dispensing of the cheapest generic version of a drug. | |||||
| Pricing cannot exceed 40 % of the equivalent branded product. | |||||
| 60 % of value of prescribed products must be generics | |||||
| Prescribing | INN prescribing | INN prescribing | INN prescribing | INN prescribing only in public sector | INN prescribing |
| Doctors have a personal budget for pharmaceuticals equals to 80 % of corresponding last year’s period. | |||||
| User Charges | Increase of contribution | 1 euro medical prescription fee 0 % | 1€ rate per prescription. Annual cap independent on income Pensioners: co-payment rate 10 % of Price with monthly cap depending on income | Co-payment Increase (varying regional levels) | |
| Tier A, 90 % of the public price of the drug is reimbursed. This tier is for essential drugs to treat severe diseases; | |||||
| 10–25 % personal contribution. Only cheapest generic product is reimbursed | |||||
| Changes in co-payment rates for non-pensioners: 40, 50 or 60 % depending on income. No cap | |||||
| Tier B: 69 % of the public price is reimbursed (essential drugs for chronic diseases) | |||||
| Tier C: 37 % of the public price is reimbursed. (drugs which have a confirmed therapeutic interest) | |||||
| Tier D: 15 % of the public price is reimbursed. (new medicines) | |||||
| Reimbursement | Delay of medicine’s reimbursement | Delay of medicine’s reimbursement | Dispensing of medicines for a maximum period of 30 days. (chronic conditions are exempted) 417 medicines indicated for minor symptoms are excluded | Reimbursements prices for generic drugs to the average European level. | |
| Regular Revisions the list of reimbursable pharmaceuticals | |||||
| Efficiency gains | Centralised hospital drug purchasing system | Tendering | Tendering | HTA (Public sector only) | Regulation of Length of stay Reduction of hospital beds |
| HTA | Economic evaluation | Clinical Pathways (Public sector only) | |||
| DRG | |||||
| Electronic Prescribing | |||||
| Charge for hospital admissions [ | |||||
| Definition of admission criteria | |||||
| Monitor of pharmaceuticals consumption across regions | |||||
| Strick controls over hospital budgets for pharmaceuticals | |||||
| Centralisation of procurement procedures HTA electronic medical records | |||||
| Pay-for-performance schemes | |||||
| HTA | |||||
| Electronic prescribing | |||||
| Guidelines Increase of patients assigned to GP | |||||
| Industry | Clawback | Clawback | Clawback | N/A | Pharmaceutical expenditure ceiling to13 percent of total health expenditure. Overall pharmaceutical spending cannot exceed 16 percent of health expenditure [ |
| Additionally 15 % rebate on products marketed for more than 10 years but with no equivalent generic or biosimilar in the market | |||||
| Cost Reduction | Breadth | Breadth | Breadth | Breadth | Breadth |
| Scope | Scope | Scope | Scope | Scope | |
| Depth of health coverage | Depth of health coverage | Depth of health coverage | Depth of health coverage | Depth of health coverage |
Index of medicines’ prices and index adjusted by GDP PPP per capita
| Italy | Greece | Cyprus | Spain | Portugal | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Index of medicines prices | 95,52 | 67,4 | 100 | 75,36 | 68,99 |
| Index of medicines adjusted by GDP PPP per capita | 85,54 | 71,75 | 100 | 69,27 | 80,71 |
Fig. 1Graph of prices, GDP PPP per capita and adjusted price index for GDP PPP per capita in the selected Countries
Affordability for eight major health conditions
| Condition | Products | Strength | Price (Eur) (Price calculated per monthly basis for each denoted strength ) | ||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Italy | Greece | Portugal | Cyprus | Spain | |||
| Dyspepsia | Esomeprazolea | 20 mg | 7,08 | 10,81 | 8,8 | 18,63 | 6,3 |
| Diabetes | Januvia | 100 mg | 59,22 | 50,22 | 50,53 | 58,37 | 55,72 |
| Osteoarthritis | Etoricoxiba | 90 mg | 17,84 | 14,02 | 16,32 | 23,1 | 20,32 |
| Blood pressure | Candesartan | 16 mg | 11,95 | 12,36 | 22,62 | 28,8 | 25,76 |
| Hypercholesterolemia | Rosuvastatin | 5 mg | 22,49 | 11,27 | 17,01 | 28,74 | 18,9 |
| Depression | Escitaloprama | 10 mg | 24,97 | 13,23 | 11,52 | 15,39 | 16,66 |
| Osteoporosis | Zolendronic acidb | 5 mg/100 ml | 557,36 | 451,27 | 344,21 | 590,98 | 422,65 |
| Asthma | Salmeterol/Fluticasone | 25/50 μg | 41,22 | 34,39 | 36,15 | 41,33 | 39,6 |
| Lowest monthly wage | 992.4 [ | 878 | 565 | 870 | 748 | ||
| Catastrophic expenditure threshold | 942.8 | 834 | 536 | 826 | 710 | ||
aFor Esomeprazole, Etoricoxib and Escitalopram, the cost was calculated based on consumption for 28 days, thus calculating the cost of two packages
bFor Zolendronic acid, the monthly cost was calculated, since this product is administered yearly
Catastrophic health expenditure
| Italy | Greece | Cyprus | Spain | Portugal | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Percentage of population of each acquisition of one product could be assessed as exceeding the threshold of catastrophic expenditure | 24 % | 25 % | 19 % | 31 % | 23 % |
| Number of diabetics of which acquisition of one product could be assessed as exceeding the threshold of catastrophic expenditure | 975,000 | 150,000 | 15,000 | 992,000 | 230,000 |