Abstract

BackgroundSustainability and the ability to maintain the right to health, with the guarantee of access to quality medicines and health services, have been a great challenge for countries with universal health systems. The great technological advances bring with it an expressive increase in the expenditures of the health systems, especially those directed towards the acquisition of high-cost drugs, which are still under patent protection, have a high cost and, in some cases, present uncertainties about their effectiveness and safety. As a way of maintaining the proper functioning of the systems and guaranteeing access to these medicines, some countries started to negotiate discounts with manufacturing companies. Pricing agreements have been adopted by developed countries with the objective of reducing their spending on high-cost medicines and, although they represent an opportunity for better negotiation with the industries, they violate the principle of transparency that regulates the world market. However, the existence of confidentiality agreements has meant that the declared prices are not the actual prices, unfairly harming the countries that use these price lists as beacons in their systems.MethodsRepresentatives of health, judicial, legislative, patient organizations and academics from eight countries in Latin America and South Korea participated in a meeting in September 2017 in Chile to discuss price confidentiality agreements and the impact on public health policies. During the meeting, participants were presented with a hypothetical case to subsidize the discussion on the topic. Divided into groups, participants should propose recommendations for the problem by pointing out the pros and cons if each proposed recommendation was adopted. The groups were then confronted by a simulated jury and finally issued a single and final recommendation for the problem.ResultsThe topic was widely discussed and recommendations were raised by the participants. Among them, it is worth noting the elaboration of norms that regulate the negotiations of prices between the countries bringing transparency and harmony in the adopted conducts. In addition, the possible consequences and potential impacts of confidentiality on drug prices and inputs, such as information asymmetry and inequity of access between countries, were pointed out.ConclusionDespite there are efforts to make price negotiations more transparent, there is still no well-established standardization that promotes a well-functioning market. Confidentiality agreements hamper the fairness of access to essential health products.

Highlights

  • Sustainability and the ability to maintain the right to health, with the guarantee of access to quality medicines and health services, have been a great challenge for countries with universal health systems

  • Sustainability and the ability to maintain the right to health, with the guarantee of access to quality medicines and health services, have been a great challenge to managers

  • About what courts and health ministries can do to improve trade agreements and increase transparency in price negotiations, they told about making public the market prices, to make purchase agreements between countries; pricing, coefficients and rates fixed, payment of fines in case of noncompliance, and establishment of specialized courts in health

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Summary

Introduction

Sustainability and the ability to maintain the right to health, with the guarantee of access to quality medicines and health services, have been a great challenge for countries with universal health systems. Several diseases have gained effective treatments, resulting in reduced mortality and morbidity of the population and increased life expectancy and quality of life [9]. These new drugs, necessary, are often priced high and do not guarantee their effectiveness and efficacy. The agreements on the entry of medicines into the market stand out These agreements are signed between a manufacturer and a public manager, in order to allow access to a specific medicine or health technology in specific conditions [2] and may involve simple discount on the unit price of a drug, discounts based on the use or performance, or both [13]. The most used types of agreements in European countries include financial and performance agreements [1]

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