<< Chronic prostatitis causes substantial health care costs and reduced quality of life | African-American women less likely to survive breast cancer than white women >>
Read in | English | Español | Français | Deutsch | Português | Italiano | 日本語 | 한국어 | 简体中文 | 繁體中文 | Dansk | Nederlands | Bahasa | Русский | Svenska | Polski

Fair access to recommended drugs in Britain

Published on June 15, 2004 at 1:01 AM · No Comments

Health Secretary John Reid has set out plans to ensure patients across the country have equal access to treatments recommended by the independent National Institute for Clinical Excellence (NICE).

He published a report by the National Cancer Director, Professor Mike Richards, which shows unacceptably high variations across the country in the uptake of cancer drugs approved by NICE.

John Reid also published a letter from Health Minister Lord Warner to key stakeholders setting out the Department’s plans to ensure better implementation of NICE recommendations across the NHS.

John Reid said:

‘We have seen major progress made in fighting cancer, with a 10% fall in premature death rates since 1996. But I recognise there is more to do and there are areas where our services are not as good as they should be.

‘Mike Richards’ report today highlights one area where we need to act – and I am determined to ensure patients across the country have access to drugs which can help them.

‘I will be asking the local NHS to set out their plans for improvement in the specific areas highlighted in Mike Richards’ report.  More generally, we are setting out detailed plans today for ensuring recommendations made by NICE are adopted by the NHS across the country, and I will be working with the Healthcare Commission to examine how they can address this issue when assessing each hospital trust.’

Lord Warner’s letter sets out a series of steps designed to improve the way in which the NHS implements NICE guidance. They include:

  •  Ensuring access to better information about implementation of NICE guidance by bringing  forward the introduction of electronic hospital prescribing to 2006 from 2008-10. This will allow  patterns of low prescribing of particular drugs to be identified and addressed.
  •  In the short term, a new agreement with commercial firm IMS will give the NHS access to   better data on current prescribing patterns.
  •  NICE will continue to review the way in which it disseminates and promotes its guidance to  make sure that it is available to front-line staff when they need it and in the format that best suits  them, and that patients are aware of treatments from which they can benefit.
  •  NICE will also ensure its guidance – which already looks at the costs of new drugs, devices  and procedures – provides advice on all the major costs of its guidance and provides advice on  the best ways of ensuring full implementation.
  • NICE will work with NHS partners to help disseminate best practice in the implementation of  its guidance.

John Reid added:

Comments
The opinions expressed here are the views of the writer and do not necessarily reflect the views and opinions of News-Medical.Net.



  Country flag

biuquote
  • Comment
  • Preview
Loading