Greek Crisis Dries Up Drug Supply

THEFAN

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Just a heads up of what could happen!!



http://www.bloomberg.com/news/2012-0...-dries-up.html

For patients and pharmacists in financially stricken Greece, even finding aspirin has turned into a headache.

Mina Mavrou, who runs a pharmacy in a middle-class Athens suburb, spends hours each day pleading with drugmakers, wholesalers and colleagues to hunt down medicines for clients. Life-saving drugs such as Sanofi (SAN)s blood-thinner Clexane and GlaxoSmithKline Plc (GSK)s asthma inhaler Flixotide often appear as lines of crimson data on pharmacists computer screens, meaning the products arent in stock or that pharmacists cant order as many units as they need.

When we see red, we want to cry, Mavrou said. The situation is worsening day by day.

The 12,000 pharmacies that dot almost every street corner in Greek cities are the damaged capillaries of a complex system for getting treatment to patients. The Panhellenic Association of Pharmacists reports shortages of almost half the countrys 500 most-used medicines. Even when drugs are available, pharmacists often must foot the bill up front, or patients simply do without.

The financial crisis is brewing a Greek tragedy of slowing access to medical care and worsening outcomes for patients, Martin McKee, a professor of European public health at the London School of Hygiene and Tropical Medicine, wrote in an October article in The Lancet.

The Greek Ministry of Health didnt respond to repeated requests for comment.

Many Difficulties

It would be unrealistic to deny that there are many difficulties regarding all public services due to the financial crisis, Nicolaos Polyzos, secretary general of the Ministry of Health, wrote in a response to McKees article posted on the ministrys website. However, this cannot justify characterizing the current picture of (the) health sector in Greece as a tragedy.

The reasons for the shortages are complex. One major cause is the Greek government, which sets prices for medicines. As part of an effort to cut its own costs, Greece has mandated lower drug prices in the past year. That has fed a secondary market, drug manufacturers contend, as wholesalers sell their shipments outside the country at higher prices than they can get within Greece.

Strained government finances only make matters worse. Wholesalers and pharmacists say the system suffers from a lack of liquidity, as public insurers delay payments to pharmacies, which in turn cant pay suppliers on time.

Wholesalers simply do not have the money anymore to play bank to the pharmacies, Heinz Kobelt, secretary general of the European Association of Euro-Pharmaceutical Companies, said in a telephone interview.

330 Million Euros

Public insurers owe pharmacists some 330 million euros ($422.1 million) for drugs bought since April, Dimitris Karageorgiou, vice-chairman of the pharmacists association, said in an interview last month. Payment can take three months to up to a year, pharmacists said. Some are turning to patients to pay up front.

Theyre saying you pay me now, and then youll get the money from your social security fund, said Ioannis Theodorakis, chairman of the Association of Persons with Multiple Sclerosis.

Theodorakis said he already knows a few patients who cant afford to pay and arent on treatment. If non-payment by public insurers continues, more will discontinue treatment, he said in an interview in his office in Athens, a few steps from where protesters lob Molotov cocktails and pelt police with rocks at Syntagma Square.

Dysfunctional System

The whole system is dysfunctional, said Aggeliki Matsouki, who opened her first pharmacy in Athens in 1981.

Chain-smoking in her tiny back office, Matsouki described calling other pharmacies to track down London-based Glaxos oral herpes drug Famvir. If I cant find a prescription drug, I try to borrow it from colleagues. We exchange medicines.

Austerity measures imposed to address the financial crisis may paradoxically be making matters worse. Greek wholesalers now have more incentive than ever to sell drugs outside the country after Greece implemented a law last year further reducing prices. The law sets prices of medicines according to the average of the three lowest charges in 22 European Union countries, part of an effort to trim a health bill that in 2010 totaled more than 13 billion euros, or about 5 percent of GDP.

Parallel Trading

Parallel imports peaked in 2004, then flattened out about two years ago once drugmakers imposed quotas of the maximum amount of medicines they think the Greek market will need, said Kobelt, whose Brussels-based association represents companies engaged in the trade. Still, if pharmacies cant pay, it makes economic sense to ship the drugs back out again rather than let them languish on wholesalers shelves, he said.

Kobelt said hes seen boxes of Bayer AG (BAYN)s Aspirin in Poland that originated in Greece, suggesting that the medicine fetches higher prices in eastern Europe.

Even Polish people pay more than Greeks for Aspirin, he said. That is the recipe for parallel trade, Im sorry to say.
Novo Nordisk A/S (NOVOB), based in Bagsvaerd, Denmark, is a case in point.

We are competing with our own products, said Mike Rulis, a spokesman for the company.

Novo stopped selling some of its higher-priced insulins in Greece for about a month in 2010 after the government cut prices by about 25 percent. The drugmaker now ships in the same volume as before the cuts, yet pharmacists are running short of insulin, Rulis said in a telephone interview.

Special Deliveries

There are cases where pharmacies will call our Greek affiliate and say, We are out of stock, can you help us, he said. Then we will call the wholesaler to make a special delivery.

Reimbursement fraud compounds the drain on the countrys health resources, Richard Bergstrom, director-general of European Federation of Pharmaceutical Industries and Associations, said in an interview. Drugs shipped elsewhere yet submitted for reimbursement to public insurers as if they had been prescribed to patients cost Greece more than 500 million euros a year, Bergstrom said, citing figures he said he got from the Ministry of Health.

In a later e-mail, Bergstrom said he had personally seen packs of drugs with Greek reimbursement stickers on the market outside of Greece, suggesting that exporters were reimbursed and able to ship the packs abroad.

If the pack is exported, the exporter is obliged to cancel the code, a bar code, by using a black pen, Bergstrom wrote. But this is not monitored.

Up-Front Payment

Not all pharmacists can afford to pay up-front for costly drugs in the hope of being reimbursed by insurers.

An invoice provided to Bloomberg News shows Roche Holding AG (ROG) requesting a 926-euro payment in advance from a pharmacy for NeoRecormon, a medicine used to treat anemia in chemotherapy and chronic kidney disease patients.

The Swiss drugmaker switched to a payment-on-delivery policy for hospitals with a history of nonpayment last year after accepting 400 million Swiss francs ($426.7 million) in Greek government bonds for unpaid hospital debts. The Greek government announced in December 2010 it would issue more than 5 billion euros of non-interest paying bonds to hospital suppliers for unpaid bills from 2007 to 2009.

Roche extends a credit to pharmacies and in some cases has extended credit limits to ensure patients can get drugs, Daniel Grotzky, a company spokesman, said in a telephone interview. This might be a pharmacy which has used up its credit line, he said.

Difficult Decisions

A year ago, the Health Ministry advised MS patients to buy medicine through state hospitals, Theodorakis said. Those hospitals often dont have enough drugs, so patients go to pharmacies instead, he said.

Theodorakis stopped taking Merck KGaA (MRK)s Rebif in 2006 because he wasnt satisfied the drugs benefits outweighed its side effects in his particular case. The frustrating process of obtaining medicine contributed to his decision not to start taking another drug, said Theodorakis, who uses a wheelchair and has an assistant to type his e-mails.

Its a difficult decision to make because you cant play dice with your health, Theodorakis said.




http://www.bloomberg.com/news/2012-0...-dries-up.html
 

Doozerdoo1

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Very scary, I do believe we are in for a lot of trouble here in the USA also soon! I'm stocking up, diabetic here and got myself a year supply but....several in My family is diabetic, none of them have tried to get more then they need, they just do not care. I'm sure they will when crap hits the fan. Also stocking on antibiotics to!
 

Icu4dzs

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There was a time in history when the availablity of drugs in general was either non-existent or only available to those who knew what plants and sources some medicines came from. I've spent some of my reading time attempting to learn what the effect of diseases has been on folks who have done things like write, either poetry, music or just history as well as the effects of certain diseases or medical problems on famous people. The world did NOT have all the advantages we now have. For instance, how many of the ladies know that Mary Todd Lincoln suffered for the remainder of her life because she had an unrepaired 4th degree obstetric laceration? Trust me, that doesn't sound like much fun but those are the realities and truths we faced as a people back when we didn't know as much as we know now. The fact that Beethoven was deaf ought to get your attention.

The point I am making here is that we have become SO dependent on drugs in society that we have forgotten the BASICS of health care. Somewhere it says "Cleanliness is next to G*dliness" and they were RIGHT ON THE MONEY with that one.

How we deal with the future and the availability or NON-availability of drugs and medicines will be a true test of our ability as a people to adjust to the changes coming in our world. Pharmacology is just one of those arts, that might need to be preserved, so keep a book on it handy. Compounding things is almost a lost art. How many of you know how to make skin creams or Bag Balm? How do you make something as basic as morphine from opium poppy's? What about anesthesia? Can we do surgery without that? Not well I assure you.
Find out what is in those things and how to get them now before this happens to us.

Folks who are dependent on medications to live will be the first of the long line of casualties leading to death. (Have you ever seen the YouTube video by a gal who calls herself "Patriot Nurse"? It is truly an awakening discussion by a nurse who has figured this out) She spells this out quite well. She mentions 3 phases of casualty. Those whose diseases overwhelm them initially including the very old and very young, those who will succumb to the disease because the medications are not available and those who are killed trying to steal and commit crime as a result of these things. Her video is VERY informative and very painfully true.

Diabetics will not be able to get enough of their medicines to last all that long and probably not be able to make insulin either. Folks with congestive heart failure will die ugly deaths because they can't get the diuretics. pneumonia will kill folks again more than we see now. Infection will kill folks quickly and in pain. There won't be ANY cancer "survivors". These are some of the realities that folks tend to ignore in a SHTF scenario. People will kill each other to get hold of antibiotics. What then? How long will a SHTF scenario last? How will society be "re-built" so that those types of things are once again available to the people of the world much less to our country?

Then we will have to face the questions as to whom will those medicines that are remaining go to? I'm sure there are folks who work in Washington, DC who think they are more valuable than "regular folks" because they have built all kinds of places to protect themselves in the SHTF scenario. What then becomes of the rest of us "REGULAR" folks? ARe we just left to die because a few folks in Washington, DC think they are "MORE valuable?" Now we get into some really serious questions about the worth of human life and whose is "worth more than others". NOT a question I'd like to be asked, you can bet on that.

We could be in for some seriously hard times if things like those going on in Greece start to happen here. Many folks bad mouth the pharmaceutical industry but they have kept Americans alive longer than in any other time in history. War will have very little effect on the population by comparison if the folks who make pharmaceuticals are not working at what they do best. Then again, people might be more motivated to live a healthier lifestyle by not eating 10x the calorie load their body needs. Obesity and its' attendant diseases might just regress statistically because McD's isn't selling billions of hamburgers and milkshakes.

An interesting note is that I am NOT the only M.D. who posts here. There is a lady M.D (ob/gyn) who writes here as well although I haven't seen her around lately. I'd be very interested to hear her perspective on this topic.

Just sayin'
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