U.S.
pressing India to avoid capping medical device prices,
allow withdrawals
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[October 04, 2017] By
Aditya Kalra
NEW DELHI (Reuters) - The United States is
pressing India not to extend price caps on medical devices and wants New
Delhi to allow firms to withdraw products from the market if they do not
wish to sell at government determined rates, a U.S. trade official told
Reuters.
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Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi's government has in recent
months slashed prices of medical devices such as knee implants and
heart stents by up to 75 percent to make them more affordable.
But the $5 billion Indian medical-technology industry - which counts
U.S. firms such as Abbott Laboratories <ABT.N>, Boston Scientific
Corp <BSX.N> and Johnson & Johnson <JNJ.N> as key players - has
protested these moves, saying they hurt innovation, profits and
future investment.
A senior United States Trade Representative (USTR) official said
they were pressing India to not extend price caps to other devices,
allow for higher pricing for technologically advanced equipment and
let companies withdraw their products if they wish to.
India last month issued orders which effectively barred companies
from any immediate withdrawals of heart stents or knee implants
following price capping to ensure adequate supply of devices for
patients. Abbott, for example, wants to withdraw one of its stents
saying it's not commercially viable under government set prices, but
India has rejected its plea.
"It is a principal concern for the United States," the U.S. official
said on condition of anonymity.
India's trade ministry, which co-chairs such discussions under the
U.S.-India Trade Policy Forum did not respond to a request for
comment. The federal drug pricing regulator referred questions to
the department of pharmaceutical, which did not respond to queries.
Modi, however, has previously said that providing affordable
healthcare to patients takes precedence over the interests of
companies.
The government has equated high margins charged for some medical
devices with "illegal profiteering". In some cases these margins can
exceed 400 percent.
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The United States has been increasing pressure on India to revise
its stance on price caps for medical devices. A person familiar with
the matter said assistant USTR Mark Linscott and his delegation last
month conveyed their concerns to Indian trade officials in New
Delhi.
In May, a group of U.S. Congress members urged India to reconsider
its decision to cap prices of stents, which are tiny wire mesh tubes
used to treat blocked arteries.
Tanoubi Ngangom, an associate fellow for healthcare at the New
Delhi-based Observer Research Foundation, said India must continue
to develop policies based on its requirements and not succumb to
diplomatic pressure.
"Indian government should retain a pro-public health stance on
pricing medical devices to ensure access to affordable healthcare,"
she said.
(Reporting by Aditya Kalra; Editing by Sanjeev Miglani & Shri
Navaratnam)
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