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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? |
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. |
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. |
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. |
Pharmaceutical Executive December 1, 2010 |
The Sum of All His Parts: Career Reflections of Europe's Chief Drug Regulator The European Medicines Agency is a unique institution, pursuing a mandate shared with a complex web of national and regional groups, each able to place a distinctive imprint around the delicate task of certifying the safety and efficacy of new drugs. |
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. |
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. |
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. |
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. |
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. |
Pharmaceutical Executive August 1, 2008 Sarah Houlton |
Jumping the Gun The Association of the British Pharmaceutical Industry and the British government have come up with a solution for price regulation that isn't as bad as the industry had feared. |
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. |
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 |
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. |
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? |
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. |
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. |
Pharmaceutical Executive June 1, 2009 |
Pay For Play The P4P movement is here. Pharma marketers, it's time to take note. |
Pharmaceutical Executive November 1, 2012 Sue Barrowcliffe |
Real World Insights Commercial teams as well as patients can benefit from managed access programs, which are designed to provide access to medicines outside of the clinical and commercial setting, for patients who have no other available treatment options. |
Pharmaceutical Executive June 1, 2006 Nancy Dreyer |
Personalized Medicine Meets the Real World A wave of genomic medicines is coming down the pipeline, and they're going to be expensive. Can companies prove they're worth it? Maybe: but the claims payers seek aren't coming from traditional clinical trials. |
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. |
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. |
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? |
Chemistry World December 17, 2015 Sarah Houlton |
Pills, prices and politics Pharmaceutical pricing has been a hot topic in 2015, with the drugs bill continuing to rise as costly new treatments reach the market. |
Pharmaceutical Executive September 1, 2012 Robin Hertz |
The Endless Treadmill of End-of-Life Care Bending the cost curve back to valuing the cycle of life. |
Pharmaceutical Executive November 1, 2014 Jill Wechsler |
Outrage Grows Over Drug Pricing Insurers, physicians attack high-cost therapies in anticipation of specialty drug surge. |
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. |
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 |
Managed Care March 2007 Martin Sipkoff |
Managing Cancer Treatment Begins Before Diagnosis Health plans are increasingly involved in promoting the lifestyle changes that help their members avoid cancer, and are increasingly involved in clinical trials if prevention fails. |
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. |
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. |
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. |
Chemistry World June 22, 2011 Sarah Houlton |
US Approves Cancer Drugs Twice as Fast as Europe Cancer drugs are, on average, approved nearly twice as fast in the US than they are in Europe. |
Global Services February 29, 2008 Imrana Khan |
A Mammoth Project Gone Awry NHS National Program for IT is an outsourcing project steeped in complexity, but thriving amidst a heap of controversies. Its veritably a study of sorts in large scale outsourcing of public sector transformation projects |
Pharmaceutical Executive November 1, 2012 Lauri Mitchell |
Who Pays for Specialty Medicines? Providers and patients fish for that delicate balance between access and abandonment. |
BusinessWeek January 30, 2006 Catherine Arnst |
Going Broke To Stay Alive Rising prices for cancer treatments are making patients - and doctors - balk. |
Pharmaceutical Executive May 1, 2005 Sarah Houlton |
Global Report: Iron Fist The United Kingdom is hardening its stance on pharma industry issues. |
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. |
Chemistry World June 25, 2013 Emma Stoye |
NHS to offer breast cancer prevention drugs New guidelines for the UK National Health Service suggest that women at high risk of breast cancer should be offered a five-year course of tamoxifen or raloxifene to prevent the disease developing. |
Pharmaceutical Executive October 1, 2014 William Looney |
Youthquake You may not realize it, but the demographic "youth skew" in America is shaping healthcare and that's a good thing. |
The Motley Fool August 22, 2006 Brian Gorman |
NICE Unkind to Biotech Developments in the U.K.'s drug coverage may hurt U.S. biotechs. Biotech investors, keep your eyes on this issue. |
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. |
CIO October 1, 2005 Montalbano & Niccolai |
England's New Patient Record System Ailing A study in the British Medical Journal reports that an effort in England to centralize patient records on a standard IT system is at risk because local staff are feeling left out of the implementation process. |
Chemistry World November 22, 2013 Emily James |
100 million for cancer research centers Cancer Research UK has invested 100 million pounds in 15 innovative research centers, acquiring high level expertise to solve the latest challenges in cancer. |
Pharmaceutical Executive July 1, 2005 Sarah Houlton |
Global Report: Still Waiting Pharma industry and traders both want a decision on parallel trade in Europe--but not the same one. |
The Motley Fool June 6, 2007 Brian Orelli |
Cure Your Cancer or Your Money Back Janssen-Cilag, a subsidiary of Johnson & Johnson, has recently offered to refund the cost of Velcade to the British National Health Service if the patient fails to respond to its multiple myeloma drug. Drug-company investors need not worry about these kinds of deals. |