External reference pricing goes global
This article was originally published in SRA
Executive Summary
Do you know how drug prices are set in Guam, Kiribati or Micronesia? Or whether countries like Bhutan, Papua New Guinea and Uzbekistan use external reference pricing (ERP)? If not, you're in good company. The World Health Organization and Health Action International have no idea either, and have asked people living in 39 countries around the world to let them know whether they operate any kind of drug pricing systems, and if so whether these include ERP1.
You may also be interested in...
Industry & Regulators To Align Advice on COVID-19 Vaccine Updates
A multi-stakeholder workshop looked at the data needed to support updates to vaccine composition and the time required by manufacturers to update their vaccines, change their manufacturing processes and prepare approval applications.
Denmark Planning To Impose Drug Stockpiling Obligations From July
A new bill is intended to address the increase in medicine supply problems in Denmark in recent years.
National Drug Stockpiles Create ‘False Sense Of Security’
The generics and biosimilars industry body Medicines for Europe says disparate national stockpiling requirements are not a solution to shortages and can bring “significant risks” for the supply chain and access to medicines.