[Home]  [Headlines]  [Latest Articles]  [Latest Comments]  [Post]  [Mail]  [Sign-in]  [Setup]  [Help]  [Register] 

"International court’s attack on Israel a sign of the free world’s moral collapse"

"Pete Hegseth Is Right for the DOD"

"Why Our Constitution Secures Liberty, Not Democracy"

Woodworking and Construction Hacks

"CNN: Reporters Were Crying and Hugging in the Hallways After Learning of Matt Gaetz's AG Nomination"

"NEW: Democrat Officials Move to Steal the Senate Race in Pennsylvania, Admit to Breaking the Law"

"Pete Hegseth Is a Disruptive Choice for Secretary of Defense. That’s a Good Thing"

Katie Britt will vote with the McConnell machine

Battle for Senate leader heats up — Hit pieces coming from Thune and Cornyn.

After Trump’s Victory, There Can Be No Unity Without A Reckoning

Vivek Ramaswamy, Dark-horse Secretary of State Candidate

Megyn Kelly has a message for Democrats. Wait for the ending.

Trump to choose Tom Homan as his “Border Czar”

"Trump Shows Demography Isn’t Destiny"

"Democrats Get a Wake-Up Call about How Unpopular Their Agenda Really Is"

Live Election Map with ticker shows every winner.

Megyn Kelly Joins Trump at His Final PA Rally of 2024 and Explains Why She's Supporting Him

South Carolina Lawmaker at Trump Rally Highlights Story of 3-Year-Old Maddie Hines, Killed by Illegal Alien

GOP Demands Biden, Harris Launch Probe into Twice-Deported Illegal Alien Accused of Killing Grayson Davis

Previously-Deported Illegal Charged With Killing Arkansas Children’s Hospital Nurse in Horror DUI Crash

New Data on Migrant Crime Rates Raises Eyebrows, Alarms

Thousands of 'potentially fraudulent voter registration applications' Uncovered, Stopped in Pennsylvania

Michigan Will Count Ballot of Chinese National Charged with Voting Illegally

"It Did Occur" - Kentucky County Clerk Confirms Voting Booth 'Glitch'' Shifted Trump Votes To Kamala

Legendary Astronaut Buzz Aldrin 'wholeheartedly' Endorses Donald Trump

Liberal Icon Naomi Wolf Endorses Trump: 'He's Being More Inclusive'

(Washed Up Has Been) Singer Joni Mitchell Screams 'F*** Trump' at Hollywood Bowl

"Analysis: The Final State of the Presidential Race"

He’ll, You Pieces of Garbage

The Future of Warfare -- No more martyrdom!

"Kamala’s Inane Talking Points"

"The Harris Campaign Is Testament to the Toxicity of Woke Politics"

Easy Drywall Patch

Israel Preparing NEW Iran Strike? Iran Vows “Unimaginable” Response | Watchman Newscast

In Logansport, Indiana, Kids are Being Pushed Out of Schools After Migrants Swelled County’s Population by 30%: "Everybody else is falling behind"

Exclusive — Bernie Moreno: We Spend $110,000 Per Illegal Migrant Per Year, More than Twice What ‘the Average American Makes’

Florida County: 41 of 45 People Arrested for Looting after Hurricanes Helene and Milton are Noncitizens

Presidential race: Is a Split Ticket the only Answer?

hurricanes and heat waves are Worse

'Backbone of Iran's missile industry' destroyed by IAF strikes on Islamic Republic

Joe Rogan Experience #2219 - Donald Trump

IDF raids Hezbollah Radwan Forces underground bases, discovers massive cache of weapons

Gallant: ‘After we strike in Iran,’ the world will understand all of our training

The Atlantic Hit Piece On Trump Is A Psy-Op To Justify Post-Election Violence If Harris Loses

Six Al Jazeera journalists are Hamas, PIJ terrorists

Judge Aileen Cannon, who tossed Trump's classified docs case, on list of proposed candidates for attorney general

Iran's Assassination Program in Europe: Europe Goes Back to Sleep

Susan Olsen says Brady Bunch revival was cancelled because she’s MAGA.

Foreign Invaders crisis cost $150B in 2023, forcing some areas to cut police and fire services: report

Israel kills head of Hezbollah Intelligence.


Status: Not Logged In; Sign In

Health/Medical
See other Health/Medical Articles

Title: Greek Crisis Has Pharmacists Pleading for Aspirin as Drug Supply Dries Up
Source: Bloomberg
URL Source: http://www.bloomberg.com/news/2012- ... n-as-drug-supply-dries-up.html
Published: Jan 12, 2012
Author: Naomi Kresge
Post Date: 2012-01-12 07:04:07 by CZ82
Keywords: None
Views: 15609
Comments: 40

Greek Crisis Has Pharmacists Pleading for Aspirin as Drug Supply Dries Up

By Naomi Kresge - Jan 10, 2012 5:01 PM ET .

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. Photographer: Louisa Gouliamaki/AFP/Getty Images . 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 aren’t in stock or that pharmacists can’t 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 country’s 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 didn’t 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 McKee’s article posted on the ministry’s 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 can’t 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.

“They’re saying you pay me now, and then you’ll 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 can’t afford to pay and aren’t 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 Glaxo’s oral herpes drug Famvir. “If I can’t 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 can’t pay, it makes economic sense to ship the drugs back out again rather than let them languish on wholesalers’ shelves, he said.

Kobelt said he’s 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, I’m 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 country’s 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 don’t have enough drugs, so patients go to pharmacies instead, he said.

Theodorakis stopped taking Merck KGaA (MRK)’s Rebif in 2006 because he wasn’t satisfied the drug’s 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.

“It’s a difficult decision to make because you can’t play dice with your health,” Theodorakis said.


Poster Comment:

But I thought the State sponsored single payer Healthcare systems were supposed to keep things like this from happening!!!! (sarcasm)...... And ObozoCare is supposed to fix all of our problems..... "NOT"!!!!!!

Post Comment   Private Reply   Ignore Thread  


TopPage UpFull ThreadPage DownBottom/Latest

Begin Trace Mode for Comment # 21.

#1. To: CZ82 (#0)

One major cause is the Greek government, which sets prices for medicines.

ObamaCare, Medicaid, & Medicare already set the price of medicine, medical treatments, & provider payments. I know of a MS Medicaid patient that was denied a medicine just last week which had worked for her when the cheaper ones had already been tried and failed. Physicians in the Government Healthcare-VA hospitals are complaining that it takes 6 months to get an MRI approved, one doctor I know there says the delay has cost at least one of her patients his life.

The most deadly cancer known to man is Big Government.

Happy Quanzaa  posted on  2012-01-12   7:27:01 ET  Reply   Untrace   Trace   Private Reply  


#2. To: Happy Quanzaa (#1)

I know of a MS Medicaid patient that was denied a medicine just last week which had worked for her when the cheaper ones had already been tried and failed.

BULLSHIT.

war  posted on  2012-01-12   8:37:10 ET  Reply   Untrace   Trace   Private Reply  


#3. To: war (#2)

Bullshit my ass, true story.

The patient had been taking a name brand with good results for 2 years, after first trying the cheap stuff with no results, but Medicaid said no more. Then the physician sent a letter, which took an uncompensated hour of work to write, explaining why the patient needed this particular med. The government then faxed an 8 page form for appeal, another 1 1/2 hours of uncompensated paperwork, requesting the same information they had already received in the letter, which had to filled returned within 24 hours. The physician didn't even see it until the late next evening when she normally checks & responds correspondence. Not only that, they faxed something to the patient to fill out too, like they expect Medicaid patients all have fax machines sitting around & operational in their Section 8 housing.

Bottom line, patient gets no meds that work, doctors lose more money wasting hours of time on unnecessary paperwork for Medicaid patients that they already lose money on treating, even w/o the added bureaucrat generated obstacles. And worthless parasitic bureaucrats waste billions getting paid to generate paperwork denying patients the care they need.

Happy Quanzaa  posted on  2012-01-12   9:08:31 ET  Reply   Untrace   Trace   Private Reply  


#4. To: Happy Quanzaa (#3)

Medicare policy on meds changed with the prescription drug program. Patients afflicted with long term illnesses with no chance of getting better are no longer denied medication based upon the fact of their condition being one which will not improve. Medicare will still deny some physical therapy for that reason but my experience with Medicare with Parkinson's, which is in the same Medicare catagory as MS, is that any medication that was within the accepted Parkinson's protocol was covered.

Your friend if s/he was, in fact, denied, should appeal. Someone screwed up.

war  posted on  2012-01-12   9:44:42 ET  Reply   Untrace   Trace   Private Reply  


#7. To: war (#4) (Edited)

in fact, denied, should appeal.

I'm telling you she did, and the government faxed back paperwork with an impossible to meet deadline to the doctor and the patient's non-existant fax machine. Not only that, they've wasted 6 hours of the doctor's time so far that could have been spent seeing other patients. Now the patient who wasn't having to see the doctor very often will be making frequent visits in search of another medication that's OK with Washington, DC. And again, Medicaid, & Medicare do not even reimburse enough to cover the expenses of the most routine of visits, and a large majority of those expenses are the result of government regulations. The rest are the result of CYA from the trial lawyers (who just happen to all be Democrats & Big Money Democrat contributors, BTW).

Government is what's wrong will healthcare, and every new thing they do to diddle w/ it makes it worse.

Everything government's ever fucked with, government's fucked up. Everything. Why anyone would think ObamaCare would be different is beyond me.

Happy Quanzaa  posted on  2012-01-12   11:06:38 ET  Reply   Untrace   Trace   Private Reply  


#10. To: Happy Quanzaa (#7)

I'm telling you she did, and the government faxed back paperwork with an impossible to meet deadline to the doctor and the patient's non-existant fax machine.

How is 120 days an impossible deadline?

Your "story" has more holes than a New Orleans cathouse...

war  posted on  2012-01-12   11:13:23 ET  Reply   Untrace   Trace   Private Reply  


#12. To: war (#10)

How is 120 days an impossible deadline?

24 hours, the doctor was required to fax the paperwork back in 24 hours. Paperwork she didn't even see until around 24 hours later.

Happy Quanzaa  posted on  2012-01-12   11:15:55 ET  Reply   Untrace   Trace   Private Reply  


#16. To: Happy Quanzaa (#12)

Medicare gives 120 days for all appeals.

Something is whacked somewhere.

war  posted on  2012-01-12   11:24:32 ET  Reply   Untrace   Trace   Private Reply  


#20. To: war (#16) (Edited)

Medicare gives 120 days for all appeals.

Something is whacked somewhere.

This is Medicaid. There may be another level of appeal though, there probably is. But even if in the end the patient gets the proper medication again the dosage has to be recalibrated when she gets back on it, and countless hours of the doctor's time have been wasted with unnecessary paperwork and patient visits that wouldn't have been required if the bureaucrats had left well enough alone.

But we all know why the government really does this shit, it's an excuse to keep parasitic paper shufflers paid in DC and the state offices. They don't give a rat's ass about the patients or the people actually doing the real work of treating them.

Happy Quanzaa  posted on  2012-01-12   11:37:45 ET  Reply   Untrace   Trace   Private Reply  


#21. To: Happy Quanzaa (#20)

But even if in the end the patient gets the proper medication again the dosage has to be recalibrated when she gets back on it, and countless hours of the doctor's time have been wasted with unnecessary paperwork and patient visits that wouldn't have been required if the bureaucrats had left well enough alone.

Yep. That's what happens when you want to make sure no undeserving person gets something for nothing.

BTW, health insurance works the same way.

lucysmom  posted on  2012-01-12   11:45:24 ET  Reply   Untrace   Trace   Private Reply  


Replies to Comment # 21.

#24. To: lucysmom (#21)

Yep. That's what happens when you want to make sure no undeserving person gets something for nothing.

Just what I said, undeserving overpaid bottom feeding bureaucrat parasites screwing stuff up.

Happy Quanzaa  posted on  2012-01-12 12:01:05 ET  Reply   Untrace   Trace   Private Reply  


End Trace Mode for Comment # 21.

TopPage UpFull ThreadPage DownBottom/Latest

[Home]  [Headlines]  [Latest Articles]  [Latest Comments]  [Post]  [Mail]  [Sign-in]  [Setup]  [Help]  [Register] 

Please report web page problems, questions and comments to webmaster@libertysflame.com