
PPRS Payments Now Worth £150m in the UK
A second payment has now been made under the UK’s Pharmaceutical Price Regulation Scheme (PPRS).
A second payment has now been made under the UK’s Pharmaceutical Price Regulation Scheme (PPRS). Adding a further
Payments are a new feature of the long-standing voluntary PPRS. The 2014 agreement between the Association of the British Pharmaceutical Industry (ABPI) and the DH set a tough allowable growth rate on the annual NHS spend on branded medicines of 0% for 2014. It’s the same flat growth for 2015, but spend is permitted to rise in the later years of the scheme. The payments made so far are
Future payments
It’s still not clear exactly how much companies will need to pay back for the rest of this year, or in future. Payments will be set for 2015 after the DH has seen the figures for quarter 3 of this year. You can bet that all 134 member companies of the PPRS are keeping an eye on the payments and considering their position if the payments keep going up.
Companies who chose not to be in the PPRS know their position; they should have cut their prices by 15% as required by the Statutory Scheme for Branded Medicines. What their price cut will be for next year isn’t clear. The Statutory Scheme can be changed by the Government and who knows if they will ask for the same, or more of a price cut next year. Plus price cuts should be visible on the list price with international reference price implications.
Where does the money go?
Just what the money will be spent on is subject to a lot of discussion. Payments have been made to the Department of Health in the past under previous incarnations of the PPRS, essentially a cash payment to ensure savings equivalent to previous headline price cuts were delivered, and where that went was never clear. The new PPRS doesn’t, on the face of the agreement at least, say where PPRS payments should go.
Stephen Whitehead, Chief Executive of the ABPI,
Others in industry, such as Johanna Mercier from Bristol-Myers Squibb, suggest that the PPRS provides a “right to prescribe” for innovation according to
There may well be some difficulties getting money to those who actually hold budgets in the NHS, and there are still reports of
Leela Barham is an independent health economist. You can find out more about on her website -
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