LONDON - How to measure medical corruption?
Tuan Anh Nguyen, a researcher at Hanoi University of Pharmacy, believes informal
payments to doctors are "a dominant factor" in high prices of the
older off-patent drugs that make up the lion's share of prescriptions in many
emerging markets.
After interviewing doctors, pharmaceutical
companies, government officials and pharmacists in both the private and state
hospital sectors, he concluded in a study published last year that around 40
per cent of the drugs' price in Vietnam is typically spent on offering
financial inducements to doctors.
"When I talk to colleagues in some other
Asian countries they say the situation is the same," he told Reuters.
His investigation broke down the different
legal and illegal components that contribute to the cost of drugs in Vietnam,
and found 40 to 60 per cent of the final price could be spent to induce
prescribers to use particular medicines, and to persuade procurement officers
inside hospitals to buy them. The biggest share went to doctors.
Nguyen said the problem was worse with generic
medicines sold by Asian companies, although his study did not name any firms.
In Vietnam the price of these is sometimes even higher than that of the
original branded product, in order to recoup payments made to doctors by drug companies
trading these medicines.
But Western drug firms are not immune:
pharmaceutical company representatives who spoke to Nguyen reported that
doctors typically expect a commission of about 15 per cent from European drug
makers; the figure they look for from Asian producers is nearer 40 per cent.
The study, which was presented at the
International Conference for Improving Medicines in Antalya, Turkey, last
October, found multinational companies tend to prohibit bribes, officially at
least, although pressure to achieve sales targets often means representatives
ignore this and give money to prescribers.
At other times, multinationals pay for one-off
benefits like luxury holidays that would be prohibited under anti-kickback
rules adopted by the drug industry in the United States.
Doctors surveyed said they took the cash and
non-cash offers to make up for low salaries, and it was common for commissions
from the pharmaceutical industry to become the main source of income for some
physicians, leaving those reputable doctors who are determined to stay
"clean" out in the cold.
It's a situation one foreign drug salesman
says has turned the system upside down: "Now, the worse the doctors, the
more money they have. It's ridiculous."
Reuters
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