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Chemistry World
June 18, 2008
Ananyo Bhattacharya
Deal on NHS drugs set to trim pharma profits An agreement between the UK government and the pharmaceutical industry will cut around five per cent off the cost of medicines sold to the National Health Service mark for My Articles similar articles
Chemistry World
November 21, 2008
Pete Mitchell
UK drug price deal finalised The new deal is guaranteed to continue for five years - a great relief to the industry. mark for My Articles similar articles
Pharmaceutical Executive
May 1, 2011
Julian Upton
UK Stakeholders Have Their Say on Value-Based Pricing The UK coalition government's consultation on the intro of value-based pricing has invited caution and resistance. mark for My Articles similar articles
Pharmaceutical Executive
December 1, 2006
Sarah Houlton
Global Report: Not So NICE A new manifesto by the Association of the British Pharmaceutical Industry is designed to improve drug access in the UK, where industry has worried for years about poor uptake of new medicines. mark for My Articles similar articles
Pharmaceutical Executive
April 1, 2007
Sarah Houlton
Global Report: If It Ain't Broke Under the UK's pricing scheme, drug prices have dropped by 21% in 10 years. Is it really time for a change? mark for My Articles similar articles
Chemistry World
April 2007
Richard Barker
Comment: Pricing Pills An Office of Fair Trading report claims The UK's National Health Service is paying over the odds for its drugs, but this is not so. Medicine prices are 21% lower in real terms than ten years ago. mark for My Articles similar articles
Pharmaceutical Executive
May 1, 2012
Value-Based Pricing: Too High a Price for UK Pharma? Changes to the system in the UK could finally put some real metrics behind the elusive concept of value but with payers clearly in the driver's seat, who needs clarity? mark for My Articles similar articles
Chemistry World
March 7, 2008
Peter Mitchell
Uk Drug Pricing System Scrapped The UK government is scrapping its existing national scheme for controlling drug prices. The system, called the Pharmaceutical price regulation scheme (PPRS), will be replaced by a newly negotiated agreement on 1 September 2008. mark for My Articles similar articles
Chemistry World
March 20, 2008
Richard Van Noorden
UK Drug Firms to Slash Research and Jobs The UK pharmaceutical industry is expecting to cut jobs and investment in R&D following an alarming slump in confidence in the UK market. mark for My Articles similar articles
Chemistry World
March 17, 2014
Phillip Broadwith
UK to fast-track access to critical medicines Critically ill patients in the UK could receive new medicines before they are formally approved under a new scheme beginning in April. mark for My Articles similar articles
Pharmaceutical Executive
December 1, 2011
UK Report: Keep Calm and Carry On ... Differently Even as the global economic roller coaster affects one of the country's dearest public institutions, the National Health Service, there is still reason for optimism in these times of austerity. mark for My Articles similar articles
Pharmaceutical Executive
August 1, 2012
Leela Barham
The Queen's English Defining the language of value based pricing in the United Kingdom and ultimately the world. mark for My Articles similar articles
Pharmaceutical Executive
October 1, 2008
Sarah Houlton
Open For Debate Tensions mount as stakeholders in the UK health industry attempt to work out drug cost problems. mark for My Articles similar articles
The Motley Fool
January 8, 2008
Brian Orelli
Brits May Bludgeon Drug Companies The U.K.'s National Health Service delivers a shock to drugmakers; it is considering a 10% drop in the rate that it pays for drugs, to help it reach its goal of a 3% reduction in the nation's overall health-care bill. mark for My Articles similar articles
Pharmaceutical Executive
May 1, 2005
Sarah Houlton
Global Report: Iron Fist The United Kingdom is hardening its stance on pharma industry issues. mark for My Articles similar articles
Pharmaceutical Executive
October 1, 2014
Leela Barham
The Gate Keeper Dr. David Haslam, Chair of the UK's National Institute of Health and Care Excellence, discusses what the quantitative calculations of value mean to patient access in today's messy world of real-time medicine. mark for My Articles similar articles
Pharmaceutical Executive
February 1, 2007
Sarah Houlton
Global Report: Under One Roof The UK government is planning to set up a single body to oversee all health research in universities and hospitals - and to facilitate partnerships between government agencies and industry. mark for My Articles similar articles
Chemistry World
May 2006
Bea Perks
Editorial: Generics in the Dock The manufacturers of generic medicines in the U.K. must work harder to guard their good reputation. Or perhaps, manufacturers of generic medicines must work harder to counter their bad reputation. mark for My Articles similar articles
Chemistry World
December 8, 2011
Maria Burke
Government Launches UK Life Sciences Strategy Prime minister David Cameron has announced a package of measures designed to boost the UK's life sciences industry. mark for My Articles similar articles
Pharmaceutical Executive
January 21, 2014
Comer & Upton
Pharm Exec's Annual Industry Outlook 2014 For Big Pharma, the merits of strategic focus and operational discipline are more important than ever. It is time to be decisive; muddling through is so yesterday. mark for My Articles similar articles
Chemistry World
October 8, 2010
Sarah Houlton
U-turn on Alzheimer's drugs in the UK The UK National Institute for Health and Clinical Excellence proposes that those with mild disease will be able to receive them from early next year, on the basis of growing clinical evidence of their effectiveness. mark for My Articles similar articles
Pharmaceutical Executive
May 1, 2006
Sarah Houlton
Global Report: A Hope and a Payer If current trends continue, the United Kingdom will spend 12.7 percent of its GDP on healthcare by 2050. Maybe that means it's time to reform the National Health Service's notoriously complex drug payment scheme. mark for My Articles similar articles
Pharmaceutical Executive
November 1, 2005
Sarah Houlton
Global Report: Drug Evaluation in the UK The availability of new medicines has been thrown into the limelight once more, with UK's National Institute for Health and Clinical Excellence being called upon to make dramatic improvements to the speed at which it carries out evaluations. mark for My Articles similar articles
BusinessWeek
June 2, 2011
Kresge & Connolly
A New Pricing Game for Drugmakers in Europe Germany's new rules tying pharmaceutical prices to greater efficacy is worrying companies. mark for My Articles similar articles
Chemistry World
September 7, 2015
Cancer Drugs Fund axes 23 treatments The Cancer Drugs Fund, which covers the cost of some cancer treatments that are not currently available on the National Health Service, has cut 23 treatments -- involving 16 drugs. mark for My Articles similar articles
Chemistry World
July 10, 2012
Interview: EMA head Guido Rasi His five-year appointment comes during a period of dramatic change for the pharma industry, which is struggling with patent expirations for many of its biggest selling drugs and a paucity of new drugs coming through the pipeline to take their place. mark for My Articles similar articles
Pharmaceutical Executive
October 1, 2010
Taking a Less-Generic Route to Generics A leading pharmaceutical industry player speaks out on what is fueling success in the sector. mark for My Articles similar articles
Pharmaceutical Executive
November 1, 2008
Sarah Houlton
Cash Flow Woes in EU In Europe, the wildly different attitudes toward healthcare across the different member states make for a complex pharmaceutical marketplace. mark for My Articles similar articles
Pharmaceutical Executive
January 1, 2013
William Looney
The Permanent Campaign Promoting the merits of private-sector drug innovation is no easy task; just ask the UK's Office of Health Economics, with a record 50 years of engagement around the hard policy questions that ultimately drive success in the pharmaceutical marketplace. mark for My Articles similar articles
Pharmaceutical Executive
October 1, 2006
Sarah Houlton
Global Report: Please Come Back Health authorities in Europe are working hard to reestablish their countries as preferred locations for pharma's R&D facilities. Fortunately, they've got a blueprint: China. mark for My Articles similar articles
Chemistry World
July 2010
Meeting Mr NICE guy Bibiana Campos-Seijo meets the chief executive of the National Institute for Health and Clinical Excellence, Sir Andrew Dillon mark for My Articles similar articles
Pharmaceutical Executive
September 1, 2012
Stan Bernard
The Payer C Change: From Customers to Competitors "Payers have evolved to become powerful global contenders with pharma for increasingly limited funding of drug budgets." Understanding why and how this payer shift to dominance occurred is critical for pharmaceutical professionals in adjusting their business model. mark for My Articles similar articles
Pharmaceutical Executive
April 1, 2012
Feam & Lagus
Providing Access Now While regulatory frameworks and medical practices differ between countries, many patients still need early access to new drugs. Industry can help. mark for My Articles similar articles
The Motley Fool
June 24, 2010
Luke Timmerman
Amylin Cuts 60 Jobs The pharmaceutical company says research is still a priority. mark for My Articles similar articles
Chemistry World
May 8, 2008
Hepeng Jia
China to fast track pioneering drugs China is to speed up the approval of groundbreaking new drugs in an effort to encourage innovation in its pharmaceutical sector, a State Food and Drug Administration (SFDA) official has revealed. mark for My Articles similar articles
Chemistry World
December 19, 2013
Steven Ford
Cut price pills cost more than pennies We need to take a good look at supply diversity: we cannot allow the situation where suppliers are too big to fail. It's time to raise the bar across the pharmaceutical supply line from producer to patient. mark for My Articles similar articles
Chemistry World
January 3, 2013
Sarah Houlton
2012 pharma industry roundup It may have been a relatively quiet year in terms of mergers and acquisitions, but the pharma industry nonetheless made plenty of headlines in 2012. mark for My Articles similar articles
Chemistry World
November 28, 2008
Matt Wilkinson
EU claims pharma delaying tactics cost 3 billion euros Pharmaceutical manufacturers have been criticised by the EU competition commission for slowing the entry of generic medicines to the market. mark for My Articles similar articles
Chemistry World
May 5, 2015
Anthony King
Merger creates biggest supplier of unlicensed drugs Specialty pharma company Clinigen is to buy its rival Idis, making it the market leader in ethical unlicensed drug supply. mark for My Articles similar articles
Pharmaceutical Executive
July 3, 2007
Sarah Houlton
Global Report: Five-Year Survivor: European Edition The UK government's attitude seems to be that oncology treatments are hugely expensive -- and that too much of the National Health Service budget is vanishing into the pockets of drug companies. Will cancer networks fill the gap? mark for My Articles similar articles
Pharmaceutical Executive
August 1, 2012
Carol Ann Williams
Data Exclusivity: Making the Case As the scope and complexity of registration information demanded by regulators increases, protection of that know-how has become a critical differentiator in the "go" or "no go" calculation on whether to invest in a new medicine. mark for My Articles similar articles
Pharmaceutical Executive
January 1, 2006
Sarah Houlton
Global Report: The UK's New Code of Conduct Pharma companies' relationships with doctors are being tightened in the United Kingdom, after a major overhaul of the Association of the British Pharmaceutical Industry's Code of Practice. mark for My Articles similar articles
Chemistry World
April 23, 2013
Emma Stoye
Invest in research or be left behind, UK academies warn The UK's four national academies have called on the government to increase investment in research over the next decade or risk being overtaken by international competitors. mark for My Articles similar articles
Chemistry World
October 1, 2012
Andrew Turley
Pharma should 'double output by 2022' The President's Council of Advisors on Science and Technology advises that pharmaceutical companies should set a goal of doubling output of 'innovative new medicines that meet critical public health needs' over the next 10 -- 15 years. mark for My Articles similar articles
Chemistry World
March 27, 2013
Eugene Gerden
Russian investment vehicle sets sights on innovative drugs Russian state-owned nanotechnology giant Rusnano is hoping to break into the pharmaceutical sector with sizeable investments in firms seeking to produce innovative drugs. mark for My Articles similar articles
Chemistry World
September 30, 2014
Transparency measures forced on pharma Previous misdemeanors are compelling the pharmaceutical industry to be more open with financial information and clinical data. mark for My Articles similar articles
Pharmaceutical Executive
November 1, 2011
Europe Tackles 'Advertising in Disguise' Fears The EC's latest proposals have thrown water on Europe's fiery Direct-to-Consumer advertising debate. But is it enough to keep the flames at bay? mark for My Articles similar articles
Pharmaceutical Executive
January 1, 2011
The Steep, Slow Climb A survey of leading experts reveals 2011's sobering reality and the trends that smart drugmakers will follow into the next decade. mark for My Articles similar articles
Pharmaceutical Executive
September 1, 2011
Richard Barker
Innovating Around Innovation The former Director General of ABPI, proposes a new agenda on how to restore public confidence in the value behind science. mark for My Articles similar articles
Pharmaceutical Executive
September 1, 2005
Parker & Amar
Building Blockbusters The most lucrative new drugs are often less glamorous than first-in-class new molecular entities. And they are much less risky. mark for My Articles similar articles