Generic drug industry agrees to cut prices up to 40% in 5-year deal with provinces - Action News
Home WebMail Friday, November 22, 2024, 05:30 AM | Calgary | -13.4°C | Regions Advertise Login | Our platform is in maintenance mode. Some URLs may not be available. |
Health

Generic drug industry agrees to cut prices up to 40% in 5-year deal with provinces

Canada's generic drug industry agrees to cut prices 25 per cent to 40 per cent for provincial/public drug plans, in exchange for suspending open tenders.

Public drug plans agree not to ask for open tenders in bid to get drug costs lower

More than 70 per cent of all prescriptions reimbursed under Canada's public drug plans are generic drugs, according to the pan-Canadian Pharmaceutical Alliance. (Spencer Platt/Getty)

Canada's generic drug industry has agreedto cut prices 25 per cent to 40 per centfor provincial/public drug plans, in exchange for suspending open tenders for five years.

The pan-Canadian Pharmaceutical Alliance made the announcement on Monday on behalf of participating federal, provincial, and territorial public drug plans andthe Canadian Generic Pharmaceutical Association.

"As ofApril 1, 2018, the prices of nearly 70 of the most commonly prescribed drugs inCanadawill be reduced by 25 per cent to40 per cent, resulting in overall discounts of up to 90 per centoff the price of their brand-name equivalents," the groups said in a statement.

The announcement follows a similar agreement announced by Quebec's government in July 2017. The province's health minister saidQuebec spends about $800 million annually on generic drugs, and that the agreement will mean a decrease of more $300 million a year, which works out to a roughly 40 per centreduction.

Canada has world's third-highest drug prices

7 years ago
Duration 4:12
Canadians are struggling to get important drug prescriptions filled, in part because we have the world's third-highest drug prices. Another factor is that doctors rarely talk about the cost; there's now a push to use technology to change that

More than 70 per centof all prescriptions reimbursed under Canada's public drug plans are generic drugs, the alliance said.These include medications used to treat high blood pressure, high cholesteroland depression that are collectively used by millions of Canadians.

Under the new agreement, provincial and territorial governments agreed not to pursue tendering for participating drug plans over the five-year term.

Ensuring stable supply

The groups said since generic drugs covered by the agreement are manufactured by multiple companies, it will help to ensure a stable supply for Canadian patients.

The five-year agreement provides assurance to the generic drug industry, which willknow the rules and prices before bringing drugs to market, saidJeff Connell, vice-president of corporate affairs at theCanadian Generic PharmaceuticalAssociation.

"It essentially ties their hands, because tendering of generic supply can be one of the most effective means of reducing prices and also of ensuring the supplier is committed to making sure that Canada gets the medicine it needs," said Steve Morgan, aprofessor in the School of Population and Public Health at the University of British Columbia.

The generics industry does not want open tendering because it forces them to cut their margins and compete on price, he said.

Health agencies that demand tendering,such as the U.S. Veterans Affairs and New Zealand public drugs plan,often demandsecurity of supply clauses that bring a tremendous incentive for the winner of the tender to make sure they deliver the drugs or else they're required to compensate the cost of supplying the drug to the market from a competitor, Morgan said.

Morgan hasstudied the merits and disadvantages of establishing a universal program for prescription medications for all Canadians, also called pharmacare.

The deals come as a parliamentary committee weighs the pros and cons of a national pharmacare plan.

The price discounts are to start on April 1.

Savings of up to $3billion for public drug plans are expected over five years.