This is an area of growing controversy as countries implement policies ranging from a free-market approach to restricted lists and reference pricing of subsidised medicines. With the possible exception of the free-market approach, most of the remaining policies have cost containment as their primary goal. However, since pharmaceuticals account for only approximately 10% of most developed countries' health budgets, the maximum cost saving is small compared to what could be achieved in other areas. Furthermore, appropriate pharmaceutical intervention in many cases saves costs in other areas of health expenditure. It is unfortunate that the structure of health funding in Australia and some other countries does not take into account such savings.3
In a review of measures to control the pharmaceutical industry,4 the authors concluded that price regulation is a relatively crude way of controlling expenditure on pharmaceuticals. The reviewers recognised the Australian efforts to utilise economic analyses to aid the decisions about subsidising new products. However, they also commented that a rigorous evaluation of the impact of the Australian approach is required.
Since this review, the Australian government has introduced reference pricing for a number of drug classes. This questions the role of pharmacoeconomic analyses and has the secondary effect of undermining the patent life of new compounds in the affected classes. Such changes may prompt companies to withdraw products or rationalise their product range. In New Zealand, the cost-containment strategies of the drug subsidy agency contributed to the withdrawal of famciclovir and valaciclovir.5