UK Set to Pay 25% More for Innovative Medicines as Part of US Deal
The UK has agreed to pay a significant premium for new medicines over the next decade, following a zero-tariff deal with the United States. The deal is set to cost an estimated £3 billion annually and will see the National Health Service (NHS) in England allocate 0.6% of its budget towards innovative therapies, doubling its current allocation of 0.3%.
Critics have accused the government of caving in to US pressure, with Liberal Democrat leader Helen Morgan describing it as a "Trump shakedown" that will leave patients footing the bill. The party claims that NHS funding is already insufficient to absorb the costs, and warned against raiding budgets for care services.
However, NHS leaders argue that the deal will ultimately benefit patients by securing access to groundbreaking new treatments for conditions such as cancer and rare diseases. "This landmark agreement will prove worthwhile in terms of tens of thousands of patients receiving life-saving new drugs," said an NHS spokesperson.
The UK-US deal has also been hailed as a boost to the pharmaceutical industry, which had paused or scrapped major investments in protest over government approaches to drug pricing. The agreement includes a reduction in tariffs on medicines manufactured outside the US, allowing for increased exports of UK-made treatments.
Under the new arrangement, the National Institute for Health and Care Excellence (NICE) will increase its budget allocations for potentially life-extending drugs, paving the way for approvals of several more life-saving treatments. While some have questioned how these costs will be funded, sources within Whitehall say that hundreds of millions of pounds have already been allocated in the comprehensive spending review to cover the initial costs.
The agreement also includes changes to a longstanding NHS procurement scheme, with rebates reduced under the new voluntary arrangement for branded medicines pricing and access. This guarantees suppressed prices for branded drugs should demand exceed annual caps, similar to schemes in other European countries.
The UK has agreed to pay a significant premium for new medicines over the next decade, following a zero-tariff deal with the United States. The deal is set to cost an estimated £3 billion annually and will see the National Health Service (NHS) in England allocate 0.6% of its budget towards innovative therapies, doubling its current allocation of 0.3%.
Critics have accused the government of caving in to US pressure, with Liberal Democrat leader Helen Morgan describing it as a "Trump shakedown" that will leave patients footing the bill. The party claims that NHS funding is already insufficient to absorb the costs, and warned against raiding budgets for care services.
However, NHS leaders argue that the deal will ultimately benefit patients by securing access to groundbreaking new treatments for conditions such as cancer and rare diseases. "This landmark agreement will prove worthwhile in terms of tens of thousands of patients receiving life-saving new drugs," said an NHS spokesperson.
The UK-US deal has also been hailed as a boost to the pharmaceutical industry, which had paused or scrapped major investments in protest over government approaches to drug pricing. The agreement includes a reduction in tariffs on medicines manufactured outside the US, allowing for increased exports of UK-made treatments.
Under the new arrangement, the National Institute for Health and Care Excellence (NICE) will increase its budget allocations for potentially life-extending drugs, paving the way for approvals of several more life-saving treatments. While some have questioned how these costs will be funded, sources within Whitehall say that hundreds of millions of pounds have already been allocated in the comprehensive spending review to cover the initial costs.
The agreement also includes changes to a longstanding NHS procurement scheme, with rebates reduced under the new voluntary arrangement for branded medicines pricing and access. This guarantees suppressed prices for branded drugs should demand exceed annual caps, similar to schemes in other European countries.