Drug firms facing challenging times due to price control
Calling for in-licensing system for patented and monopoly drugs
developed abroad, Cipla chairman Y.K. Hamied said the company will continue its
efforts to offer patients affordable medicines.
Drug companies are facing a tough environment
due to the government bringing more products under the price control policy as
also tightening of registration procedure that has impacted time to market
newer products, Cipla chairman Y.K. Hamied has said.
“The
environment for the domestic pharma companies remains challenging with more
products coming under price control, and other pressures such as government
legislation to ban certain fixed dose combination drugs,” Hamied told
shareholders at the company’s annual general meeting (AGM), as per a regulatory
filing on Thursday.
Moreover, with the tightening of new product
registration procedures, the approval time to market newer products has also
been significantly impacted, he added. “We
do hope that the government will look into some of these challenges
pragmatically to ease the operational environment for the pharma industry,”
Hamied said.
The domestic pharma sector looks after the
healthcare needs of India as well as many other countries, he added. “We are a major producer and supplier of
affordable drugs worldwide. Many countries are dependent on India for their
drugs. Now that our Indian pharma industry is at the forefront of healthcare,
the government should be fully supportive,” Hamied said.
Calling for in-licensing system for patented and monopoly drugs developed abroad, Hamied said Cipla will continue its efforts to
offer patients affordable essential medicines. “India needs a pragmatic in-licensing system for patented and monopoly
drugs developed abroad. Your company, is more than willing to pay a reasonable
royalty to the originator, to manufacture and/or market newer drugs in the
country and also leverage our reach in the developing world to stay true to our
mission of enhancing access and affordability,” he said.
Cipla is keeping all avenues open for
appropriate licensing agreements with other global companies to make patients
better secured for affordable treatment, he added. “Unfortunately for the nation in 2005, our government under intense
international pressure changed the Patents Act, re-introduced product patents
and backdated these to 1995. This change has already led to high prices of many
vital drugs sold in India under monopoly,” Hamied said.
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