What is the issue?
Regulations are needed for the development of Pharma in India.
What are Indian measures to promote innovation?
- India, recently signed an agreement with his Israel to create a $40 million innovation fund to connect innovators from India and Israel with larger R&D opportunities.
- Funds has been allocated for Impacting research innovation and technology (IMPRINT) initiative.
- India Innovation Index to rank Indian states on their innovative spirit, to create an innovation-centric economy for India.
Why Indian market is averting innovations?
- The ethos of innovation seem to lose with regulations prevailing in India.
- Indian regulators routinely adopt strategies, including egregious ‘price control’ mechanisms which hinder the ability of the industry to innovate.
- Price control measures deny an innovator the right to price goods in line with what the market will permit.
What is the status of Indian Pharma device industry?
- India has a $2.5 billion medical-device industry.
- The growth rate of India’s medical-device industry is around 15% which is more than double of the global industry growth rate.
- It is expected to become a $25-30 billion industry in India by 2025.
- But,India spends a woeful little of only 0.9% of its GDP in bio-pharma research.
- It is largely dependent on other countries for supply of pharmaceutical ingredients and medical devices.
What are the issues with Pharma R&D?
- In February, the NPPA (National Pharmaceutical Pricing Authority), ventured from drug pricing into medical device pricing.
- It slashed prices of stents, a tube-like mesh placed to unblock arteries to maintain the heart’s blood supply by about 85%.
- NPPA put all drug-eluting stents into a single category and price, with no consideration of innovations that have led the industry from first to the fourth generation of stents.
- NPPA disallowed stent manufacturers from withdrawing their loss-making products from the market for at least six months to avoid any shortage.
- This essentially means that stent manufacturers can neither decide the price nor the type of stents they can sell in India.
What is the need for moral regulatory practices?
- The absence of robust medical devices regulations in India may be the reason for NPPA’s current approach.
- Price control is a blunt regulatory instrument and is not a substitute for genuine healthcare reform.
- Regulatory trends by mandating price levels below market will cause such foreign suppliers to withdraw from the Indian market ultimately harming the Indian patients.
- Countries like the US and the UK have their drug regulators.
- They subject new devices to rigorous rounds of clinical trials, assessing their improvements and innovations before approving such devices.
- NPPA need to re-imagine their regulatory strategies from policing price to that of nurturing innovation.
Source: Financial Express