Showing posts with label Price. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Price. Show all posts

Saturday, September 17, 2016

Vietnam - Public hospital fees hiked by 18% in August

Public hospital services and products in 16 provinces and cities have become 18 per cent more expensive since the middle of August, as patients pay for health staff’s basic salaries. — Photo giadinhvietnam.com

HÀ NỘI — Public hospital services and products in 16 provinces and cities have become 18 per cent more expensive since the middle of August, as patients pay for health staff’s basic salaries.

Labour-intensive services such as check-ups, bed charges and surgeries, particularly those requiring up to eight medical workers for three or four hours, cost more now.


Deputy Minister of Health Phạm Lê Tuấn said the new tariff regime was for health insurance card-holders only and was being implemented in 16 localities where 85 per cent of the population have bought medical insurance.

However, special medical insurance card-holders such as poor people, children under six years of age, social welfare beneficiaries and national revolutionary contributors such as Vietnamese heroic mothers and soldiers would not be affected by the increased rates as they were subsidised wholly or mostly by the government, he said.

The localities are Lào Cai, Thái Nguyên, Điện Biên and Hà Giang, besides Bắc Kạn, Sơn La, Tuyên Quang and Cao Bằng, as well as Lai Châu, Yên Bái, Lạng Sơn and Hòa Bình, as also Đà Nẵng, Sóc Trăng, Thừa Thiên-Huế and Quảng Nam.

In March this year, public hospital fees were hiked by 30 per cent, with patients now having to pay for nearly 1,900 services and products that were earlier subsidised by the government, such as power and water, maintenance of equipment and waste treatment facilities and training and research.

When the first round of hikes took effect in March, the cost of a health check-up in first-class hospitals (national hospitals or major hospitals in cities/provinces/regions), for example, doubled to touch VNĐ40,000 (US$1.8).

Bed charges per day went up from VNĐ80,000 ($3.6) to VNĐ215,000 ($9.6).

The cost of stomach flushing rose to VNĐ106,000 ($4.7) from VNĐ30,000 ($1.3).

According to finance and health ministries, this year would see three more hospital fee hikes in other localities in the country.

The fee revision is aimed at ending government subsidies in hospitals and at gradual improvement of the quality of health services.

Phạm Lương Sơn, head of the Việt Nam Social Insurance Agency’s Health Insurance Policy Implementation Department, said the new prices would not apply to uninsured patients to give them time to buy insurance, but it would apply in the near future.

Uninsured patients would suffer the most with the rising prices, he said.

Around 71.1 million people, accounting for 77 per cent of Việt Nam’s population, had been covered by medical insurance as of the end of May. The country aims for 78.8 per cent coverage by the end of this year and 90 per cent by 2020.



You can find older posts regarding ASEAN politics and economics news at SBC blog, and older posts regarding health and healthcare at IIMS blog. I thank you.

Sunday, July 31, 2016

Price of Cancer Drugs Has Skyrocketed Since 2000

Researchers say initial prices of new cancer drugs are six times higher, raising the question of if patients are getting their money’s worth.

For some cancer patients, taking a new cancer drug is simply a matter of buying time.

It turns out, though, they are paying a lot for those extra months and years.



A study published today in JAMA Oncology reports that new cancer drugs taken in pill form have become dramatically more expensive in their initial year on the market than other drugs launched 15 years ago.

In addition, the researchers say, the prices of those drugs increase rapidly even after their first year on the market.

Dr. Alan Venook, an oncologist at the University of California, San Francisco, notes that many of these drugs are not even cures. They simply delay the progression of cancer.

“It’s beyond me. I guess they do it [raise prices] because they can do it,” Venook told Healthline. “It’s a big, big problem.”

The Price of Treatment

Researchers looked at 32 orally administered drugs introduced since 2000.

They said the average monthly cost of the drugs approved in that year was $1,869.

That figure rose to $11,325 a month for new drugs introduced in 2014. That’s a sixfold increase, even after adjusting for inflation.

One of the drugs highlighted in the research was imatinib, also known by the brand name Gleevec. When it was launched in 2001, the average monthly cost was $3,346. In 2014, that monthly cost had risen to $8,479. That’s an average annual increase of 7.5 percent.

The researchers said the amount paid by health insurance companies was factored into the cost. They also pointed out that many patients are now paying a higher percentage of these expenses than they were 15 years ago.

"Patients are increasingly taking on the burden of paying for these high-cost specialty drugs as plans move toward use of higher deductibles and co-insurance — where a patient will pay a percentage of the drug cost rather than a flat copay," said study author Stacie Dusetzina, Ph.D., an assistant professor at the University of North Carolina, in a press release.

Officials at the Pharmaceutical Research and Manufacturers of America (PhRMA) said the dramatic improvements in cancer treatment over the past decade have helped people live longer, healthier lives.

They noted the cancer death rate in the United States has fallen 23 percent since its peak and two of three patients diagnosed with cancer now live at least five years after diagnosis.

They added there has been a rapid rise in healthcare plans with high deductibles for medicine.

"Focusing solely on the list prices of medicines is misleading,” Holly Campbell, senior director of communications for PhRMA, told Healthline in an email. " A new report from the IMS Institute found net prices for brand medicines increased just 2.8 percent in 2015, down from 5.1 percent the prior year as discounts and rebates negotiated by payers rose sharply. Similarly, CVS Health and Express Scripts recently reported actual medicine spending growth in 2015 was less than half from the prior year. This is due to a competitive marketplace for medicines where large, powerful purchasers negotiate aggressively."

Is It Worth It?

The price increases bring up two questions.

Who can afford the drugs, and are they getting their money’s worth?

Venook said cancer patients are sometimes put into the position of deciding if they want to drain their finances to slow the progression of their disease.

He has one patient who has been taking Gleevec for years. It’s been effective, but the woman recently decided to take the pill only four times a week to save money.

Venook said the prices also put doctors in a predicament. They want the best for their patients, but that might not always involve taking the latest cancer drug, especially if it’s uncertain how well it will work on a particular patient.

Venook said Gleevec can have good results, so it may be worth the cost.

“It’s a very effective drug,” said Venook. “With that one, they should be able to charge a premium.”

Some of the newer drugs for hepatitis C have also been effective. In some cases, they have cured the disease and allowed patients to forgo expensive treatments such as liver transplants.

“That makes a world of difference to patients,” Venook noted.

Price Based on Value?

Venook said perhaps the best way to regulate the situation is to approve policies that require companies to set prices based on how much benefit certain drugs provide.

He suggested that perhaps a new drug could be given to a patient for free for two months. If it’s effective, then a company could start charging for it.

“The only fair way is to price drugs according to their value,” said Venook.

Dr. Len Lichtenfeld, deputy chief medical officer for the American Cancer Society, said that’s what’s happening in some countries in Europe and other places.

He told Healthline that some European nations will pay a company more for a drug if it’s effective.

He added Medicare officials in the United States are considering a plan to set payments for drugs based on how effective they are against certain diseases.

If a drug works well in treating lung cancer, for example, the pharmaceutical company would be paid more when it’s used on lung cancer patients than when it’s used less effectively on, say, colon cancer patients.

“The solutions are not going to be simple,” said Lichtenfeld. “There has to be a balance.”

Cancer Drugs Aren’t the Only Ones

Cancer drugs aren’t the only pharmaceuticals with a spotlight on them.

On Wednesday, Michael Pearson, the outgoing chief executive officer of Valeant Pharmaceuticals International, told a Senate committee that his firm was too aggressive in raising prices on its drugs.



Valeant acquired the rights to the cardiac-care drugs Isuprel and Nitropress last year. They quickly raised the medications’ prices by 525 percent and 212 percent, respectively, according to the Wall Street Journal.

In addition, the prices of 16 Valeant drugs have increased this year.

The company is under investigation by the Security and Exchange Commission (SEC) and other agencies, the Wall Street Journal reported.

Pearson told the Senate Special Committee on Aging that Valeant has spent $1 billion to help patients afford the cardiac drugs.

However, he acknowledged Valeant’s strategy of acquiring drugs that needed hefty price increases was a mistake.

His testimony came less than three months after Martin Shkreli, the former chief executive of Turing Pharmaceuticals, refused to answer questions at a House committee hearing on the rising price of drugs.

Turing made the news last year when the company bought the rights to the drug Daraprim and then raised the price per pill from $13 to $750.

Another pharmaceutical company, Gilead, made news in 2014 when it started selling the drug Sovaldi for $84,000 for a 12-week treatment regimen.

The drug has a 95 percent cure for hepatitis C.

These and other price hikes have led many consumer advocates to question why some prescription drugs cost so much and others don’t.

This spring the Federal Drug Administration (FDA) quietly started a program to speed up the drug approval process to help avoid future price gouging.

The goal is to bring more drugs onto the market, thus increasing competition and forcing down the prices of prescriptions.

David Mills



You can find older posts regarding ASEAN politics and economics news at SBC blog, and older posts regarding health and healthcare at IIMS blog. I thank you.

Friday, July 29, 2016

Philippines - Almost 70% Filipinos are deprived of needed medicines

The cost of medication is posed as one of the leading factors as to why most Filipinos do not have access to quality medication.

MANILA, Philippines - The World Health Organization (WHO) classifies the Philippines as one of the top countries where less than 30 percent of its population have regular access to essential drugs. This means that almost 70 percent of Filipinos are deprived of the medicines they need for faster health recovery.

With this alarming healthcare condition in the country, experts noted that the cost of medication is posed as one of the leading factors as to why most Filipinos do not have access to quality medication.

“In Asia, the Philippines is among the countries with the highest prices of medicines. This means that the cost of medication is far beyond the reach of many,” said Tomas Marcelo Agana III, president and CEO of Pharex HealthCorp.

“A simple illness becomes a serious threat to one’s life because of the complications that are being triggered by non-adherence to medical prescription or inadequacy of maintenance medicines.”

Agana emphasized that by offering medicines that are beyond affordable, more Filipinos will be able to go back to their normal lives without allotting more budget for medicines.

To help curb the negative impacts of not having an access to affordable medicines, the company introduces the new Pharex Compliance Pouch for cholesterol, which offers 15-day supply of medication in a resealable foil pouch.

It contains the same quality of medicine with up to 50 percent more savings compared with other branded medicines and is designed for patients who have high levels of cholesterol, especially those with Low-Density Lipoprotein (LDL) or bad cholesterol.

Affordability of the medicines should always be prioritized. With low-priced medicines, patients can fully focus on their continuous recovery instead of worrying about their budget constraints.

Agana concluded, “Medicines need not be expensive. Filipinos should be  guaranteed an affordable and reliable companion that can bolster their fast health recovery without the added costs.”



You can find older posts regarding ASEAN politics and economics news at SBC blog, and older posts regarding health and healthcare at IIMS blog. I thank you.

Wednesday, July 6, 2016

Are price-aware patients more likely to book treatments?

Potential plastic surgery patients are more likely to book procedures if they are price-aware than if they are not price-aware, according to a new study. The findings support price transparency in cosmetic practice, according to the study’s coauthor Jonathan Kaplan, M.D., MPH, owner, Pacific Heights Plastic Surgery, San Francisco, Calif., and developer of the lead generation-price transparency platform, BuildMyBod Health.

Dr. Kaplan conducted the study in his first year in private practice in a new city by integrating the price-transparency platform, which is a cost-estimator, into his practice website. Consumers would make wish lists of cosmetic procedures and check to see what Dr. Kaplan would charge to perform them. Consumers got the price estimates, while Dr. Kaplan’s practice got consumers’ contact information for follow-up.

In the first year and without spending money on advertising, Dr. Kaplan’s website received 412 wish lists from 208 consumers. Nearly 18% of those consumers came in for a consultation and 62% of the people who came in booked a procedure. The average value of the booked procedures was more than $4,000 and the total revenue generated from all leads from the price transparency platform was $92,000, according to the study’s abstract.

When Dr. Kaplan compared non–price-aware patients with price-aware patients, those who knew price were 41% more likely to book a procedure.

The study concludes that prudent integration of price transparency into a medical practice can generate leads for patients who are paying out of pocket for medically necessary procedures, as well as procedures and services not typically covered by insurance, such as cosmetic surgery.

Cosmetic Surgery Times asked Dr. Kaplan if physicians who put their prices online should consider lowering prices or making sure they’re competitive in their communities.

“The point of price transparency, at least in cosmetic surgery, is not to have the most competitive, lowest price. We're not trying to attract ‘price shoppers,’" he says. “The doctor should want to provide honest pricing so that the consults he or she sees are more likely to progress from the exam room to the operating room.”

The key, according to Dr. Kaplan, is that cosmetic surgeons post pricing honestly — reflecting the true prices that patients would be quoted in the office.

“Sometimes I overestimate the cost to be more inclusive for all body types — a tummy tuck, for example,” Dr. Kaplan says. “That way, when most patients come in, because they're smaller than average, the OR time is less, so their cost is less. How many times has your actual price been less than the estimated price?! Patients love the surprise of something being more affordable!”

PRICE TRANSPARENCY: NOT FOR EVERYONE

Despite the potential benefits, price transparency isn't for everyone, according to Dr. Kaplan.

“I worked with one doctor … that integrated this pricing estimator into his website. He got a lead from a patient that checked pricing on a breast aug after entering [her] contact information into his pricing estimator. The patient came in for a consult and booked,” Dr. Kaplan says. “Instead of being thrilled that this lead became a paying patient, he told me how disappointed he was that the patient knew the price ahead of time because, once he saw the patient, he realized [she] could probably afford to pay more. Aside from being unethical to economically profile your patients, if you're this type of doctor, price transparency may not be for you.”

While the prices cosmetic surgeons post should be honest, they are estimates.

“If a patient checks pricing for a mini tummy tuck and they come to the consult and they really need a full tummy tuck, that's not an example of ‘bait and switch’ (which is illegal and unethical). That's educating the patient on realistic expectations,” Dr. Kaplan says.

Another important component of the online BuildMyBod platform, according to Dr. Kaplan, is that no one can see the prices for specific procedures until they submit a wish list of procedures and their contact information.

“So, if there's a nosy doctor that wants to check their competitor’s prices, then that nosy doctor will be receiving a call from the price transparent doctor's office, trying to book them for a consult,” Dr. Kaplan says.