My hon. Friend is quick to leap on to a very important point. The answer is no, because in law we have an important provision to protect people who invest billions of pounds in developing new innovations. Clinicians are free to use alternative off-label drugs where there is evidence they work, but not on the basis of cost. We have a presumption in law that where a drug is licensed or on patent for a particular indagation, which is the protection for the company that has invested to bring the drug to market, we allow an alternative to be used only where there is clinical evidence, not on cost grounds. The price falls dramatically when drugs come off patent and the generics industry picks them up. There is price protection for a short period of patent life to create the incentive for people to make the extraordinary investments up front. We then get the benefit of cheap drugs through the generics sector.
Access to Medical Treatments (Innovation) Bill
Proceeding contribution from
George Freeman
(Conservative)
in the House of Commons on Friday, 16 October 2015.
It occurred during Debate on bills on Access to Medical Treatments (Innovation) Bill.
About this proceeding contribution
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600 c605 Session
2015-16Chamber / Committee
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