LIKE
Tuesday April 23, 2024


Click the logos
for news and info
about these companies

Non-Profits & Special Events








Products & Services










Banking & Finance




Construction &
Real Estate






Travel & Tourism








Public Affairs











Top Headlines

For Immediate Release
December 22, 2004

Contact:
Jeffrey Ory, Deveney Communications
(504) 949-3999
E-mail: beryl@wolfenews.com

Beryl Wolfe
(207) 883-6083

Statement by Dr. Paul Antony, Chief Medical Officer, PhRMA, on Drug Importation Task Force Report

Washington, D.C. — PhRMA looks forward to reviewing in detail the “Report on Prescription Drug Importation” released today by the Department of Health and Human Services’ Task Force on Drug Importation. PhRMA notes the report’s acknowledgment that:

  • drug importation presents substantial safety risks, and foreign governments do not assure the safety of drugs exported from their countries to the United States;

  • the overall cost savings from drug importation would likely be small and, historically, a large portion of any savings have been retained by middlemen rather than being passed on to consumers; and,

  • legalized importation would reduce research and development into new drugs and likely reduce the number of new therapies by as many as 18 new medicines per decade.

Drug importation also risks importing government price controls, which have hurt the ability of foreign countries to create new medicines, and have slowed patient access in many countries to new medicines. The U.S. now researches and develops most of the world’s new drugs. Patients all over the world would lose if government price controls harmed U.S. pharmaceutical research.

The “Pharmaceutical Price Controls in OECD Countries” report issued today by the Department of Commerce confirms that foreign price controls harm Americans by reducing research into new drugs. Taken together, these reports substantiate that importation proposals represent a false promise to American consumers.

Importing medicines from abroad is not a long-term solution to the healthcare challenges patients face. Many safe and cost-effective alternatives to importing medicines already exist, including pharmaceutical company patient-assistance programs that last year provided over 18 million free prescriptions to patients in the U.S. Real solutions begin by ensuring that every patient has access to needed medicines through these and other alternatives. Solutions such as the Medicare prescription drug benefit (set to begin January 2006) contain costs through private-sector competition, and make medicine more accessible and available.

PhRMA supports solutions that help patients, and it is committed to continuing its work to ensure that those who lack prescription drug coverage have access to the medicines they need.

“Report on Prescription Drug Importation,” HHS Task Force on Drug Importation, can be accessed at www.hhs.gov/importtaskforce/Report12-20.pdf

The Pharmaceutical Research and Manufacturers of America (PhRMA) represents the country’s leading pharmaceutical research and biotechnology companies, which are devoted to inventing medicines that allow patients to live longer, healthier and more productive lives. PhRMA members invested an estimated $33.2 billion in 2003 in discovering and developing new medicines. PhRMA companies are leading the way in the search for new cures.

###


PhRMA Internet Address: www.phrma.org




NOTE: Wolfe News Wire is an online source for news and information about noteworthy companies and organizations. We invite you to share this content and/or leave a comment. Background info and past news items from a specific organization can be found by clicking the side logos. For more info, please email info@wolfenews.com. Thank you!



Terms of Use and Privacy Policy




©2015 Wolfe Public Relations. All Rights Reserved.