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2011 [UNIT PH 3340] 1 Pharmacoeconomics and Management in Pharmacy V [John Vella B.Pharm.(Hons.) M.Sc.(Pharmacoeconomics)]

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Page 1: Pharmacoeconomics and Management in Pharmacy Vstsimonpharmacy.com/docs/Pharmacoeconomics and Management … · profit-making as none of the applications were withdrawn •All the

2011 [UNIT PH 3340] 1

Pharmacoeconomics and

Management in Pharmacy V

[John Vella B.Pharm.(Hons.) M.Sc.(Pharmacoeconomics)]

Page 2: Pharmacoeconomics and Management in Pharmacy Vstsimonpharmacy.com/docs/Pharmacoeconomics and Management … · profit-making as none of the applications were withdrawn •All the

2011 [UNIT PH 3340] 2

Pharmacoeconomic news

review

[John Vella B.Pharm.(Hons.) M.Sc.(Pharmacoeconomics)]

Page 3: Pharmacoeconomics and Management in Pharmacy Vstsimonpharmacy.com/docs/Pharmacoeconomics and Management … · profit-making as none of the applications were withdrawn •All the

J. Vella [PH 3340]

MMR controversy (i)

Godlee F et al. BMJ 2011;342:bmj.c7452

©2011 by British Medical Journal Publishing Group

Page 4: Pharmacoeconomics and Management in Pharmacy Vstsimonpharmacy.com/docs/Pharmacoeconomics and Management … · profit-making as none of the applications were withdrawn •All the

J. Vella [PH 3340]

MMR controversy (ii)

• Last week it was confirmed that not only did

the researcher involved, Dr. Wakefield,not

obtain ethical permission for the study, but

also that

• ‗Drawing on interviews, documents, and data made public at the GMC

hearings, Deer shows how Wakefield altered numerous facts about the

patients’ medical histories in order to support his claim to have identified

a new syndrome; how his institution, the Royal Free Hospital and

Medical School in London, supported him as he sought to exploit the

ensuing MMR scare for financial gain; and how key players failed to

investigate thoroughly in the public interest when Deer first raised his

concerns.’ 4

Page 5: Pharmacoeconomics and Management in Pharmacy Vstsimonpharmacy.com/docs/Pharmacoeconomics and Management … · profit-making as none of the applications were withdrawn •All the

J. Vella [PH 3340]

Price cuts, again! (i)

5

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J. Vella [PH 3340]

Price cuts, again! (ii)

6

Page 7: Pharmacoeconomics and Management in Pharmacy Vstsimonpharmacy.com/docs/Pharmacoeconomics and Management … · profit-making as none of the applications were withdrawn •All the

J. Vella [PH 3340]

Price cuts, again (iii)

• The CCD continues with price reductions on

selected products

• The real effect on the average cost of

medication has yet to be evaluated

• The majority of products are branded

• A better strategy might be a comprehensive

country-wide generic education and

promotion campaign

7

Page 8: Pharmacoeconomics and Management in Pharmacy Vstsimonpharmacy.com/docs/Pharmacoeconomics and Management … · profit-making as none of the applications were withdrawn •All the

J. Vella [PH 3340]

Price cuts, again (iv)

• The introduction of sliding scale dynamics

for generic MA approvals

• Incentives for prescribers related to

prescribing budgets

• Public education on the equivalence and

cost-savings associated with available

alternatives to drug therapy

8

Page 9: Pharmacoeconomics and Management in Pharmacy Vstsimonpharmacy.com/docs/Pharmacoeconomics and Management … · profit-making as none of the applications were withdrawn •All the

J. Vella [PH 3340]

Examples of different types of dispensing margins to

create different incentives for rational dispensing

• Cost + fixed percentage

– e.g.: cost to pharmacist + 20 %

• Cost + declining percentage

– e.g.: cost + 20% for cheaper drugs,

declining to 5% for expensive drugs

• Cost + fixed professional fee

– e.g.: cost + € 3 professional dispensing fee

• Cost + differential professional fee

– e.g.: cost + € 4 for generics, € 2 for brand

name drugs

Page 10: Pharmacoeconomics and Management in Pharmacy Vstsimonpharmacy.com/docs/Pharmacoeconomics and Management … · profit-making as none of the applications were withdrawn •All the

J. Vella [PH 3340]

Manufacturers refuse to supply Malta?! (i)

10

Page 11: Pharmacoeconomics and Management in Pharmacy Vstsimonpharmacy.com/docs/Pharmacoeconomics and Management … · profit-making as none of the applications were withdrawn •All the

J. Vella [PH 3340]

Manufacturers refuse to supply Malta?! (ii)

• This article states that some foreign

distributors could drop supplies to Malta on

economic grounds

• Its has happened in Greece following

enforced price reductions of 25%, leading to

the withdrawal of Leo and Novo Nordisk

• The consequences would be untold pressure

and the state system, and a rise in private

black market prices 11

Page 12: Pharmacoeconomics and Management in Pharmacy Vstsimonpharmacy.com/docs/Pharmacoeconomics and Management … · profit-making as none of the applications were withdrawn •All the

J. Vella [PH 3340]

Greek tragedy?!

12

Page 13: Pharmacoeconomics and Management in Pharmacy Vstsimonpharmacy.com/docs/Pharmacoeconomics and Management … · profit-making as none of the applications were withdrawn •All the

J. Vella [PH 3340]

Pharmacies risk closing down!!

13

Page 14: Pharmacoeconomics and Management in Pharmacy Vstsimonpharmacy.com/docs/Pharmacoeconomics and Management … · profit-making as none of the applications were withdrawn •All the

J. Vella [PH 3340]

Initial comment (i)

• The article was ill-advised

• It gave the impression that all pharmacy

operators were interested in was profit

• It in no way mentioned the primary

professional raison d’etre, that of patient

care

• It was given weight because of the standing

of the person quoted

14

Page 15: Pharmacoeconomics and Management in Pharmacy Vstsimonpharmacy.com/docs/Pharmacoeconomics and Management … · profit-making as none of the applications were withdrawn •All the

J. Vella [PH 3340]

Initial comment (ii)

• Public reaction was overwhelmingly against

the statement, and also, judging by the blog

posts in the TOM, against pharmacists in

general

• The lack of information regarding medicine

prices and profits leads to much

misunderstanding and misconception

15

Page 16: Pharmacoeconomics and Management in Pharmacy Vstsimonpharmacy.com/docs/Pharmacoeconomics and Management … · profit-making as none of the applications were withdrawn •All the

J. Vella [PH 3340]

Reaction to the article

16

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J. Vella [PH 3340]

Pending applications

• This was carried the next day

• It insinuates that pharmacies are definitely

profit-making as none of the applications

were withdrawn

• All the actors involved do not have a clear

picture of the profitability of a pharmacy in

the Maltese Islands

17

Page 18: Pharmacoeconomics and Management in Pharmacy Vstsimonpharmacy.com/docs/Pharmacoeconomics and Management … · profit-making as none of the applications were withdrawn •All the

J. Vella [PH 3340]

Profit and loss template

SALES €350,000

COST OF SALES €291,667

GROSS PROFIT €58,333

OPERATING EXPENSES

WAGES €25,000

€9,000

INSURANCE €1,500

W&E €2,500

EXPIRED GOODS €1,500

TELEPHONE €1,000

RENT €7,000

MISC €1,500

TOTAL EXPENSES €49,000

NET PROFIT €9,333

18

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2011 [UNIT PH 3340] 19

Pharmacoeconomic

evaluation of medicine price

components

[John Vella B.Pharm.(Hons.) M.Sc.(Pharmacoeconomics)]

Page 20: Pharmacoeconomics and Management in Pharmacy Vstsimonpharmacy.com/docs/Pharmacoeconomics and Management … · profit-making as none of the applications were withdrawn •All the

J. Vella [PH 3340]

Basic facts

• Medicine prices are not just a vague concept

• The consumer end-price is arrived at after a

complex marketing strategy

• The components of a medicine price and its

context must be evaluated before passing

judgement on its cost-effectiveness

20

Page 21: Pharmacoeconomics and Management in Pharmacy Vstsimonpharmacy.com/docs/Pharmacoeconomics and Management … · profit-making as none of the applications were withdrawn •All the

J. Vella [PH 3340]

Health center charges Retail Markup

MSP

Local

Transport

MSP

Frieght

Insurance

•Overhead Costs

•Rent

•Salaries

•Electricity

•Security

Warehouse markup, Government Store Charges Local Transport

• Dispensing Fee

• Sales Tax

• VAT

IMPORTED LOCALLY PRODUCED

STA

GE

5

S

TA

GE

4

S

TA

GE

3

S

TA

GE

2

STA

GE

1

DIS

PE

NS

ED

CO

ST

R

ET

AIL

WH

OL

ES

AL

E

L

AN

DE

D C

OS

T

CF

T/

MS

P

OR

Drug Price

Component

Stage model

(WHO-HAI)

A medicine

price is

composed of a

variety of

different

individual units

all contributing

to the final cost

of treatment

.

.

Page 22: Pharmacoeconomics and Management in Pharmacy Vstsimonpharmacy.com/docs/Pharmacoeconomics and Management … · profit-making as none of the applications were withdrawn •All the

J. Vella [PH 3340]

The price of a medicine in Malta

22

16.67%

10.87%

6.59% 65.88%

Deconstruction of Pharmacy medicine price

Pharmacy Margin Distributor Margin Freight & Insurance Ex-factory

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J. Vella [PH 3340]

Common misconceptions (i)

• Many members of the public are under the

impression that there exists a system of free

pricing

• This may be because pharmaceuticals are a

negative product, i.e. consumers do not

obtain inherent satisfaction from their

purchase

• Profits are assumed to be extravagant

23

Page 24: Pharmacoeconomics and Management in Pharmacy Vstsimonpharmacy.com/docs/Pharmacoeconomics and Management … · profit-making as none of the applications were withdrawn •All the

J. Vella [PH 3340]

Common misconceptions (ii)

• the concept of volume and price elasticity

must be appreciated

• The Maltese market is too small to sustain

high volume throughputs and thus lower

purchase prices in certain cases

• One approach would be a concerted effort to

promote greater generic penetration and

lower average medicine prices

24

Page 25: Pharmacoeconomics and Management in Pharmacy Vstsimonpharmacy.com/docs/Pharmacoeconomics and Management … · profit-making as none of the applications were withdrawn •All the

J. Vella [PH 3340]

Price regulation

• Profit on medicines is fixed according to

percentage mark-ups

• A distributor gets 15% on landed cost and

the community pharmacy 20%

• The wholesale dealer‘s margin is taken out

of the distributor percentage

• The CCD(Consumer Competition

Directorate) carries out regular inspections

to ensure compliance 25

Page 26: Pharmacoeconomics and Management in Pharmacy Vstsimonpharmacy.com/docs/Pharmacoeconomics and Management … · profit-making as none of the applications were withdrawn •All the

2011 [UNIT PH 3340] 26

Innovation and the cost of

pharmaceutical products

[John Vella B.Pharm.(Hons.) M.Sc.(Pharmacoeconomics)]

Page 27: Pharmacoeconomics and Management in Pharmacy Vstsimonpharmacy.com/docs/Pharmacoeconomics and Management … · profit-making as none of the applications were withdrawn •All the

J. Vella [PH 3340]

27

The Product Development Continuum

Pharmaceutical

Medical Device

Product

Development

Product

Commercialisation

Customer

Need

Commercial

Opportunity

Activities - Costs - Timelines

Risk Value

Time

Page 28: Pharmacoeconomics and Management in Pharmacy Vstsimonpharmacy.com/docs/Pharmacoeconomics and Management … · profit-making as none of the applications were withdrawn •All the

J. Vella [PH 3340]

The development of new

medicines

• Pharmaceutical companies develop new

drugs not out of a altruistic motivation, but

rather because they fulfill a human need for

treatment and convert it into a commercial

opportunity

• Without this commercial angle

pharmaceuticals would still be in the stone

age

28

Page 29: Pharmacoeconomics and Management in Pharmacy Vstsimonpharmacy.com/docs/Pharmacoeconomics and Management … · profit-making as none of the applications were withdrawn •All the

J. Vella [PH 3340]

Pharmaceutical product lifecycles (i)

• product design is driven by customer need

and by commercial opportunity

• design becomes reality through the

development process

• the cost of development, the market

opportunity and, importantly, risk, are

integrated to estimate a product value

29

Page 30: Pharmacoeconomics and Management in Pharmacy Vstsimonpharmacy.com/docs/Pharmacoeconomics and Management … · profit-making as none of the applications were withdrawn •All the

J. Vella [PH 3340]

Pharmaceutical product lifecycles (ii)

• Product lifecycles are decreasing in length

• companies are taking longer to come to

market

• 1996 11yrs 1999 13yrs

• genomics may shorten this time

• increasing competition is also a factor

30

Page 31: Pharmacoeconomics and Management in Pharmacy Vstsimonpharmacy.com/docs/Pharmacoeconomics and Management … · profit-making as none of the applications were withdrawn •All the

J. Vella [PH 3340] 31

Trends in average longevity, 1994-2002

Source: John Ansell Consultancy (2003)

Average Longevity (years)

16.9

15.416.3

13.714.3

13.713.0 12.8

16.9

10

12

14

16

18

1994 1995 1996 1997 1998 1999 2000 2001 2002

Page 32: Pharmacoeconomics and Management in Pharmacy Vstsimonpharmacy.com/docs/Pharmacoeconomics and Management … · profit-making as none of the applications were withdrawn •All the

J. Vella [PH 3340] 32

2001

ranking

Brand

name

Marketer Year of first

launch

Year of

peak sales

Longevity (years)

1 Zocor Merck & Co 1988 not reached 13+

2 Lipitor Pfizer 1997 not reached 4+

3 Losec AstraZeneca 1988 2000 12

4 Norvasc Pfizer 1990 not reached 11+

5 Procrit Johnson & Johnson 1988 not reached 13+

6 Claritin Schering-Plough 1988 not reached 13+

7 Celebrex Pharmacia 1999 not reached 2+

8 Zyprexa Lilly 1996 not reached 5+

9 Prevacid TAP 1992 not reached 9+

10 Paxil GlaxoSmithKline 1991 not reached 10+

Further

selected

products

15 Premarin Wyeth 1942 not reached 59+

17 Augmentin GlaxoSmithKline 1981 not reached 20+

18 Prozac Lilly 1986 1998 12

44 Humulin Lilly 1982 2000 18

Longevity for selected products from global Top 50

John Ansell Consultancy / Decision Resources (2001)

Page 33: Pharmacoeconomics and Management in Pharmacy Vstsimonpharmacy.com/docs/Pharmacoeconomics and Management … · profit-making as none of the applications were withdrawn •All the

J. Vella [PH 3340]

The enormity of the pharmaceutical

business sphere (Figures for pharmaceutical production in Europe 1980-2005 in € Millions)

33

20336

39821

60220

87799

121471

160769

170000

0

20000

40000

60000

80000

100000

120000

140000

160000

180000

1980 1985 1990 1995 2000 2004 2005

Source: EFPIA member associations (official figures) – Data 2005: EFPIA estimate

Page 34: Pharmacoeconomics and Management in Pharmacy Vstsimonpharmacy.com/docs/Pharmacoeconomics and Management … · profit-making as none of the applications were withdrawn •All the

J. Vella [PH 3340]

The route a drug takes from

discovery to the patient

1 medicinal product

0 5 years 10 years 15 years 20 years

Patent expiry

SPC

(supplementary

protection certificate)

max. + 5 years

10 years of research

2 to 3 years of administrative

procedures Source : « Recherche & Vie », LIM (AGIM)

1

Page 35: Pharmacoeconomics and Management in Pharmacy Vstsimonpharmacy.com/docs/Pharmacoeconomics and Management … · profit-making as none of the applications were withdrawn •All the

J. Vella [PH 3340]

R&D as a % of sales for

pharmaceutical companies

35

15,618,5 19,3 20,3

18,6 18,3 (e)

0

5

10

15

20

25

1985 1990 1995 2000 2003 2004

%

Page 36: Pharmacoeconomics and Management in Pharmacy Vstsimonpharmacy.com/docs/Pharmacoeconomics and Management … · profit-making as none of the applications were withdrawn •All the

J. Vella [PH 3340]

R&D

• R&D costs are high within the

pharmaceutical industry

36

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J. Vella [PH 3340]

R&D - Scientific Risk

Discovery and Development of a Successful NCE

0

1

2

34

5

6

7

8

9

10

1112

13

14

15

Quantity of Substances

Yea

rs

Source: Based on PhRMA analysis, updated for data per Tufts Center for the Study of Drug Development (CSDD) database.

Introduction/Registration

Development

Basic Research

Post-Marketing

Surveillance

Clinical Tests (Humans)

Preclinical Tests (Animals)

1

2

2-5

5-10

10-20

3,000-10,000

Phases

IV

III

II

I

Page 38: Pharmacoeconomics and Management in Pharmacy Vstsimonpharmacy.com/docs/Pharmacoeconomics and Management … · profit-making as none of the applications were withdrawn •All the

J. Vella [PH 3340]

Estimated full cost of getting a new drug to

market

Note: Data have been expressed in € million, 2000 euros

Source: J.A. Di Masi, R.W. Hansen, and H.G. Grabowski, ‗The Price of Innovation: New Estimates of Drug Development Costs‘,

Journal of Health Economics 22(2003): 151-185

149344

868

0

200

400

600

800

1000

1975 1987 2000

Page 39: Pharmacoeconomics and Management in Pharmacy Vstsimonpharmacy.com/docs/Pharmacoeconomics and Management … · profit-making as none of the applications were withdrawn •All the

J. Vella [PH 3340]

High Costs of innovation

• Rising costs have had an impact on various

sectors of the pharmaceutical field

• Innovation has been curtailed as it becomes

more expensive to bring a drug to market

• Drugs are targeted towards the more affluent

regions of the world, as these can pay for

them

• Drug companies are merging in an effort to

reduce duplicated costs 39

Page 40: Pharmacoeconomics and Management in Pharmacy Vstsimonpharmacy.com/docs/Pharmacoeconomics and Management … · profit-making as none of the applications were withdrawn •All the

J. Vella [PH 3340]

New molecular entities 1986-2005

Source: SCRIP Publications - EFPIA calculations (according to nationality of mother company)

104

78

94

515154

83

61

7073

31

23

13

6 3

14

0

20

40

60

80

100

120

1986-1990 1991-1995 1996-2000 2001-2005

Europe

USA

Japan

Others

Page 41: Pharmacoeconomics and Management in Pharmacy Vstsimonpharmacy.com/docs/Pharmacoeconomics and Management … · profit-making as none of the applications were withdrawn •All the

J. Vella [PH 3340]

Medicines only for the rich?!

• The majority of pharmaceutical sales are

concentrated in North America, Europe and

Japan

• Less developed regions are ignored as they

do not offer the potential for huge profits

• Hence legislation for orphan drugs and

neglected diseases

41

Page 42: Pharmacoeconomics and Management in Pharmacy Vstsimonpharmacy.com/docs/Pharmacoeconomics and Management … · profit-making as none of the applications were withdrawn •All the

J. Vella [PH 3340]

Source: IMS MIDAS, MAT February 2006 (totals do not add due to rounding)

47,0%

30,0%

10,7%

8,2%4,2%

North America (USA,

Canada)

Europe

Japan

Africa, Asia

(excl.Japan) & Austr.

Latin America

Worldwide distribution of pharmaceutical

sales 2005

Page 43: Pharmacoeconomics and Management in Pharmacy Vstsimonpharmacy.com/docs/Pharmacoeconomics and Management … · profit-making as none of the applications were withdrawn •All the

J. Vella [PH 3340]

Pricing of an innovative pharmaceutical

product

• Typical pricing strategies for new

innovations:

• Market skimming strategy (high initial

prices)Signals market that innovation is

significant and can recoup development

expenses (assuming there‘s demand)

• Attracts competitors, may slow adoption

Page 44: Pharmacoeconomics and Management in Pharmacy Vstsimonpharmacy.com/docs/Pharmacoeconomics and Management … · profit-making as none of the applications were withdrawn •All the

J. Vella [PH 3340]

Pricing of a generic pharmaceutical

product

• Generics adopt Penetration Pricing (very

low price or free to gain market share)

• Accelerates adoption, driving up volume

• Requires large production capacity be

established early

• Manufacturing must be efficient as it the

resale price is much closer to the marginal

cost of production

Page 45: Pharmacoeconomics and Management in Pharmacy Vstsimonpharmacy.com/docs/Pharmacoeconomics and Management … · profit-making as none of the applications were withdrawn •All the

2011 [UNIT PH 3340] 45

Rising pharmaceutical care

costs

[John Vella B.Pharm.(Hons.) M.Sc.(Pharmacoeconomics)]

Page 46: Pharmacoeconomics and Management in Pharmacy Vstsimonpharmacy.com/docs/Pharmacoeconomics and Management … · profit-making as none of the applications were withdrawn •All the

J. Vella [PH 3340]

Pharmaceutical expenditure in the

Maltese Islands

• € 36.5 million in 2003

• € 76.4 millionin 2010

• A sharp increase, more than double in 7

years

46

Page 47: Pharmacoeconomics and Management in Pharmacy Vstsimonpharmacy.com/docs/Pharmacoeconomics and Management … · profit-making as none of the applications were withdrawn •All the

J. Vella [PH 3340]

The public health system and

pharmaceutical care

47

Page 48: Pharmacoeconomics and Management in Pharmacy Vstsimonpharmacy.com/docs/Pharmacoeconomics and Management … · profit-making as none of the applications were withdrawn •All the

J. Vella [PH 3340]

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J. Vella [PH 3340]

Increasing healthcare expenditure

49

Page 50: Pharmacoeconomics and Management in Pharmacy Vstsimonpharmacy.com/docs/Pharmacoeconomics and Management … · profit-making as none of the applications were withdrawn •All the

J. Vella [PH 3340]

Annual Expenditure on health in

the Maltese Islands

50

36,554,174

48,822,085 50,524,361 49,921,120

64,000,000

64,000,000

76,377,999

0

50,000,000

100,000,000

150,000,000

200,000,000

250,000,000

300,000,000

350,000,000

400,000,000

2003 2004 2005 2006 2007 2008 2009

Exp

en

dit

ure

€ M

illio

ns

Year

Pharmaceuticals

Health Budget

Page 51: Pharmacoeconomics and Management in Pharmacy Vstsimonpharmacy.com/docs/Pharmacoeconomics and Management … · profit-making as none of the applications were withdrawn •All the

J. Vella [PH 3340]

New Medicines Increase Longevity

0.120.23

0.30

0.570.45

0.76

0.56

1.07

0.62

1.37

0.70

1.65

0.79

1.96

0.0

0.5

1.0

1.5

2.0

2.5N

um

be

r o

f Y

ea

rs I

nc

rea

se

d L

on

ge

vit

y

1988 1990 1992 1994 1996 1998 2000

Increase in Longevity Due to

New Drug Launches

Total Increase in Longevity

They Account for 40% of Increase in Life Expectancy

Data source: Lichtenberg8

Page 52: Pharmacoeconomics and Management in Pharmacy Vstsimonpharmacy.com/docs/Pharmacoeconomics and Management … · profit-making as none of the applications were withdrawn •All the

J. Vella [PH 3340]

$0

$200,000

$400,000

$600,000

$800,000

$1,000,000

$1,200,000

$1,400,000

$1,600,000

$1,800,000

$2,000,000

'65 '70 '75 '80 '85 '90 '95 '00 '04

Do

lla

rs (

in M

illio

ns

)

Note: Total health care expenditures for 2004 were $1.9 trillion.

* Now revised to Structures and Equipment

** Now revised to Government Public Health Activities

Data source: U.S. Department of Health and Human Services, Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services,

Office of the Actuary6

Research and Construction*

Personal Medical Equipment

and Nonprescription Drugs

Nursing Home and Home

Health Care

Net Cost of Private Health

Insurance, Administrative

Costs, and Public Health

Programs**

Hospital Care

Prescription Drugs

Doctors, Dentists, and Other

Professional Services

Health Care Costs: 1965–2004 US

Page 53: Pharmacoeconomics and Management in Pharmacy Vstsimonpharmacy.com/docs/Pharmacoeconomics and Management … · profit-making as none of the applications were withdrawn •All the

J. Vella [PH 3340]

n Therapeutic shift from inpatient to outpatient care with drug therapy

n Direct-to-consumer (DTC) advertising and consumer demand

n Existing drugs — expanded applications and more aggressive treatment guidelines

n New drug ―improvements‖ and ―new markets‖

n Price inflation n Demographic shifts

Reasons Implications

Why more spending?

n More users

n More prescriptions per user

n More expensive mix

n Higher unit costs

Spending on healthcare is increasing annually in the Maltese Islands

Page 54: Pharmacoeconomics and Management in Pharmacy Vstsimonpharmacy.com/docs/Pharmacoeconomics and Management … · profit-making as none of the applications were withdrawn •All the

J. Vella [PH 3340]

Solutions to increased costs

• Paradoxically increased investment in

pharmaceutical care can lead to overall

reduction in healthcare costs

• This is demonstrated in the following two

slides with data from the United States

• Locally, a strong case is made for

considerable investment in obesity

prevention and diabetes education in an

effort to defray future costs

54

Page 55: Pharmacoeconomics and Management in Pharmacy Vstsimonpharmacy.com/docs/Pharmacoeconomics and Management … · profit-making as none of the applications were withdrawn •All the

J. Vella [PH 3340]

Disease Management Program Increases

Use of Diabetes Medicines and Reduces

Total Health Spending

$6,096

$488

$666

$3,596

$889

$724

$3,492

$1,440

$894

$3,283

$1,572

$1,027

$2,815

$1,409

$1,170

$1,584

$1,702

$1,393

$0

$1,000

$2,000

$3,000

$4,000

$5,000

$6,000

$7,000

$8,000M

ea

n C

os

t p

er

Pa

tie

nt

pe

r Y

ea

r

(in

20

01

U.S

. D

olla

rs)

Baseline Year 1 Year 2 Year 3 Year 4 Year 5

Follow-Up (12-Month Intervals Following Baseline)

Data source: Cranor, Bunting, and Christensen40

Other Prescriptions

Diabetes Prescriptions

Insurance Claims

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J. Vella [PH 3340]

Increased Use of Medicines Reduces Overall

Health Care Costs Mental Health/Substance Abuse (MH/SA) Spending per

Patient Fell as Drug Spending Increased, 1992–1999

Data source: Mark and Coffey39

$42.70

$55.20

$17.10

$24.10

$25.30

$45.60

$0

$20

$40

$60

$80

$100

$120

$140

Sp

en

din

g p

er

Co

ve

red

Lif

e p

er

Ye

ar

1992 1999

Psychotropic Drug Spending

Inpatient MH/SA Spending

Other MH/SA Spending

Page 57: Pharmacoeconomics and Management in Pharmacy Vstsimonpharmacy.com/docs/Pharmacoeconomics and Management … · profit-making as none of the applications were withdrawn •All the

J. Vella [PH 3340]

Reducing local pharmaceutical healthcare

costs (i) Supply chain issues

• Better inventory control, both in stock

management and in tendering procedure

• Distributive logistics applied locally would

make better use of the money allocated for

rolling stock

• At present, certain areas of the primary care

state system can be OOS, while others have

2-3 months stocks

57

Page 58: Pharmacoeconomics and Management in Pharmacy Vstsimonpharmacy.com/docs/Pharmacoeconomics and Management … · profit-making as none of the applications were withdrawn •All the

J. Vella [PH 3340]

Reducing local pharmaceutical healthcare

costs (ii) Supply chain issues

• Minimum level systems to trigger automated

re-order procedures within the context of a

pre-determined contract would ensure less

frequent OOS

• Less frequent changes of brand will reduce

patient confusion and medication errors

• Transparent tender systems, possibly online

and e-compliant

58

Page 59: Pharmacoeconomics and Management in Pharmacy Vstsimonpharmacy.com/docs/Pharmacoeconomics and Management … · profit-making as none of the applications were withdrawn •All the

J. Vella [PH 3340]

Reducing local pharmaceutical healthcare

costs (iii) Care issues

• Focus on patient-centred care, rather than

cost control

• Build a system around a central database

architecture that revolves round the patient

and the layers of pharmaceutical care

• Various degrees of care can be applied,

according to the necessity and cost-

effectiveness of the treatment

59

Page 60: Pharmacoeconomics and Management in Pharmacy Vstsimonpharmacy.com/docs/Pharmacoeconomics and Management … · profit-making as none of the applications were withdrawn •All the

J. Vella [PH 3340]

Reducing local pharmaceutical healthcare

costs (iv) Care issues

• Develop a set of indicators for the cost-

effectiveness of pharmaceutical care

• Set a minimum level of care and a set of

milestones to be achieved

• Take the step to e-medicine and do away

with mountains of paperwork, at the same

time reducing administrative costs

considerably

60

Page 61: Pharmacoeconomics and Management in Pharmacy Vstsimonpharmacy.com/docs/Pharmacoeconomics and Management … · profit-making as none of the applications were withdrawn •All the

J. Vella [PH 3340]

Reducing local pharmaceutical healthcare

costs (v) Care issues

• This can only be achieved by pharmacists

taking the lead in this change

• To do so we must have the right attitude and

initiative to blend pharmaceutical care skills

together with administrative and

pharmacoeconomic techniques

• These skills can be developed by putting our

knowledge and profession into the context in

which we learn and practice 61

Page 62: Pharmacoeconomics and Management in Pharmacy Vstsimonpharmacy.com/docs/Pharmacoeconomics and Management … · profit-making as none of the applications were withdrawn •All the

J. Vella [PH 3340]

Bibliography and Acknowledgements

• Deshpande PR, PharmD, Dept. of Pharmacy Practice, Manipal University, Manipal, India. Pharmacoeconomics,

Microsoft Powerpoint Presentation

• Drummond M, Sculpher M, Torrance G, O'Brien B, Stoddart G. Methods for the Economic Evaluation of Health

Care Programmes. 3rd ed Oxford: Oxford University Press; 2007

• Heaton A BS (Pharm), Pharm. D., RPh.Director of Pharmacy BlueCrossBlueShield of Minnesota, Performance

Enhancing Pharmaceuticals, Microsoft Powerpoint Presentation

• International Society for Pharmacoeconmics and Outcomes Research (ISPOR), Introduction to

Pharmacoeconomics, ISPOR Distance Learning Program

• Rascati, K. Essentials of Pharmacoeconomics; Philadelphia:LippincottWilliams & Wilkins; 2008

• Ridker et al, Rosuvastatin to prevent vascular events in men and women with elevated C-reactive protein.

NEJM, 359 (21), 2008

• Sale, L. Critical Appraisal of Research Reports, Department of Reproductive Health and Research, WHO,

Geneva, 2006

• Satyanarayana K, St.Peter’s Institute of Pharmaceutical Sciences, Pharmacoeconomics, Microsoft Powerpoint

Presentation

• Shull S PharmD, MBA. Basics of Pharmacoeconomics and Outcomes Research:Application to Patient Care,

Microsoft Powerpoint Presentation

• Quick J, Director, Essential Drugs and Medicines Policy – EDM, Health Technology and Pharmaceuticals

Cluster – HTP, World Health Organization, June, 2002Presentation

62

Page 63: Pharmacoeconomics and Management in Pharmacy Vstsimonpharmacy.com/docs/Pharmacoeconomics and Management … · profit-making as none of the applications were withdrawn •All the

J. Vella [PH 3340]

Bibliography and Acknowledgements

• Smith R, Wright D. Health Economics for Prescribers, Microsoft Powerpoint Presentation

• Vella J. Medicine prices in Malta and their relation to economic indicators. Dissertation, University of Malta

2010

• Vella J. Essays in Pharmacoeconomics: The QALY as a tool in evaluating treatment outcomes. Unpublished

work, 2010

• www.nso.gov.mt, National Statistics Office website

63