BioVoice News August 2016 Issue 4 Volume 1 | Page 31

“ There's a huge price disparity in stents and in absence of an industry wide consensus of a selfregulatory mechanism and we can understand the need for government to step in to protect consumers from this huge price disparity and for using the provision of NLEM via the NPPA route as a short term measure to address this burning issue being raised at the Parliament and in the media repeatedly. Dr G S K Velu, Chairman and MD, Trivitron AdvaMed quotes the findings from the recent IMS Health Study. “It clearly demonstrates that reduction of stent prices has not benefited patients so far,” she said, explaining that the singular focus on capping prices of stents will not help improve access to these medical devices. “What’s required is a comprehensive multistakeholder approach, that involves contributions from other stakeholders in the access,” she said. As per experts who vouch for imported medical stents, the study is an eye opener for the medical devices industry. The findings clearly reveal that there has been significant reduction in stent prices but it does not make much difference on overall procedure cost. Improving access to these coronary stents would require a comprehensive approach, and not just capping of prices. All stakeholders should look at the study findings as a gateway to understand the real issues that impact access to quality healthcare and improves health outcomes in India. Is there a middle ground? Many feel that the real barrier to access is not the cost of medical devices but infrastructure and manpower constraints. They say that a patient will not be able to access stent therapy in spite of lower prices, in the absence of an adequate number of trained physicians and paramedical staff to effectively use these devices. This has been supported by the IMS Health study which concluded that while the majority of the population resides in rural and tier-2/3/4 towns, infrastructure to provide healthcare services including hospitals, hospital beds per patient, pathology labs and trained doctors is limited. "There's a huge price disparity in stents and in absence of an industry wide consensus of a self-regulatory mechanism and we can understand the need for government to step in to protect consumers from this huge price disparity and for using the provision of NLEM via the NPPA route as a short term measure to address this burning issue being raised at the Parliament and in the media repeatedly,” opined Dr G S K Velu, Chairman and MD of Trivitron. He calls it a good move given the circumstances though he believes that there needs to be different price control mechanism other than DPCO for all medical devices. Mr Rajiv Nath says that the domestic and foreign manufacturers are not the villains in this context as it is the hospitals which dictate and drive the printed MRP of medical devices in their quests to cover their costs. “All stakeholders need to have balanced expectations from each other. Bringing Stents under NLEM will stop this artificial inflation by hospitals,” he mentioned. The arguments put forth by government on price cap are based on the recommendations of Subcommittee appointed by the judiciary. It wouldn’t be wise to simply dismiss it as an overreaction based on indigenous concerns. However, it is equally important to recognize the genuine concerns of multinationals on the innovation and accessibility of quality Stents to patients. The ‘Make in India’ here doesn’t nece