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Corporate appointee undermines Australian drug advisory committee
By Laura Mitchell
17 February 2001
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The Australian government headed by Prime Minister John Howard
confronts a political storm over its appointment of a former drug
company executive to head the Pharmaceutical Benefits Advisory
Committee (PBAC). The selection of former Glaxo-Wellcome director
Pat Clear is the latest example of the Howard government's open
support for the multi-billion dollar private health industry.
Since taking office in 1996 the Liberal-National Party coalition
has worked to dismantle the public health system. Last year it
was Medicare, Australia's public insurance scheme, which was under
fire. Millions of people took out private insurance, forced by
government threats that insurance premiums would rise for all
those deciding to take out private cover after June 2000. With
a debilitated public hospital system already a matter of broad
public concern and with government-sponsored ads playing on fears
about Medicare's inadequacy, the number of Australians privately
insured increased from less than 30 percent to nearly 45 percent
in under six months. As a result more than $4 billion of public
money was handed to the private insurance companies in the form
of federal rebates.
Now the PBAC, which selects drugs for listing on the Pharmaceutical
Benefits Scheme, is under attack. Drugs scheduled on the PBS receive
a government subsidy making them available to pensioners for around
$3.50 a prescription or $21.90 to the general public. Introduced
by the Chifley Labor government in 1947, the PBS is one of the
chief pillars of the public health system. The scheme has long
been a thorn in the side of the drug companies due to its role
in suppressing pharmaceutical prices. According to the Bureau
of Industry Economics, at the start of last decade drug prices
in Australia were 30 percent lower than in the EEC and 50 percent
below the world average.
Health Minister Michael Wooldridge appointed Pat Clear to the
PBAC last month after intense pressure from the pharmaceutical
industry. Last year a parliamentary review was held into the Pharmaceutical
Benefits Scheme, during which drug company spokesmen demanded
industry presence on the PBAC. In December the government introduced
a series of legislative measures, which effectively dissolved
the PBAC in its previous form.
The changes were aimed at removing those long-standing committee
members regarded as too adversarial in their attitude
to the drug companies. Professor David Henry, chairman of the
PBAC's economic sub-committee until he was dismissed last month,
told the Melbourne Age: I was seen as an impediment
to the industry's interests, namely getting their drugs on the
shelves so I had to be gotten rid of.
Clear's appointment provoked further controversy. Three prominent
board members resigned, including the PBAC's former chairman Professor
Don Birkett. All believe the committee's independence has been
fatally compromised by the inclusion of Clear and the ejection
of long-standing and experienced committee members.
Health minister Wooldridge claims the appointment involves
no conflict of interest. Yet just over a year ago Clear was Chief
Executive Officer of the Australian Pharmaceutical Manufacturers
Association (APMA). A leading spokesman for the drug companies,
he called in 1999 for increased prices for subsidised pharmaceuticals.
Martyn Goddard, the PBAC's consumer representative who resigned
last week in protest at Clear's appointment, told the Age
newspaper that Clear had led the charge against the
PBAC over many years.
Prior to his five-year tenure on the executive board of APMA,
Clear served for 15 years as a senior director for drug giant
Wellcome Australia (now Glaxo-Wellcome). As recently as three
months ago he was still employed by APMA as a private consultant
and he maintains his directorial position with the biopharmaceutical
development company FuCell.
Amid the controversy surrounding Clear's appointment much has
been revealed about the relationship between the pharmaceutical
industry and Wooldridge, including his close ties to US drug company
Pfizer. In September 1999 Pfizer provided sponsorship for an advertisement
in the Economist featuring a speech by Wooldridge. One
of the minister's former staff members has since taken up employment
with the company while it appears that Wooldridge intervened last
year to obtain preferential treatment for a Pfizer-marketed arthritis
drug Celebrex, placed on the PBS under terms favourable to the
drug's manufacturers.
Sections of the media, notably the Australian Financial
Review, have lambasted Wooldridge over his handling of Clear's
appointment. One detects in their commentary a note of annoyance
that the incestuous relations between corporate interests and
government have emerged so openly. Drug company intimidation of
PBAC members and, more generally, the wielding of financial clout
to exert control over government policy are issues that the bourgeoisie
prefers kept from the public arena.
Government smear
In parliament last week Wooldridge attempted to smear the character
of those PBAC members who have resigned and spoken out against
the government's tactics: [M]ost of the criticism has been
generated by one man, David Henry, who certainly did spit the
dummy. I do not consider it of much consequence. He has been round
there working up his little left-wing mates, and they have been
having a lovely field day...
But the stand taken by Henry, Birkett and others has received
widespread media attention and public support with doctors and
other health professionals speaking out in letters to newspapers
and on talkback radio.
On the ABC's Lateline program, Henry responded strongly
to the charges made by Wooldridge: I believe that if being
left-wing nowadays means standing up for universal health care,
if it means trying to ensure affordable drugs for everyone who
needs them, if it means challenging large corporations to justify
the very high prices that they're requesting for their productsif
that's what it is to be left-wing these days, I'm happy to be
called left-wing. But I want to know what a right-winger looks
like under this new definition.
The furore over Clear's appointment is not simply a crisis
over accountability and Liberal Party cronyism, it has a deeper
significance related to the growing costs of healthcare. According
to Dr Ken Harvey of La Trobe University's School of Public Health:
The PBS has evolved over 50 years from a scheme that subsidised
139 life-saving or disease-preventing drugs to one that now covers
560. Since the early 1980s government expenditure on the
provision of PBS drugs has grown annually by an average of more
than 12 percent.
The expansion in the number of drugs listed on the PBS reflects
the tremendous advances made by medical science over the past
half century. But these advances, especially those made during
the past two decades, have created a crisis for capitalist governments
the world over, which seek to curb public demand for access to
the fruits of modern research and development. Beginning under
Labor, the past 13 years has seen a series of inroads into the
Pharmaceutical Benefits Scheme, including the introduction and
steady increase of patient co-payments (contributions).
There is no doubt that the attack on the PBAC has been made
at the behest of the drug companies. But the PBAC can offer no
genuine solution to the crisis in pharmaceutical provision. Henry
himself admitted that he was often the recipient of angry petitions
and letters from the victims of illness denied treatment by virtue
of the committee's inability to list a multitude of new drugs.
The committee's brief is to balance public demand for pharmaceuticals
against the budgetary constraints imposed by government. As these
constraints have tightened, as they have in every area of welfare
provision, pressure has mounted on the PBAC. Last week the body's
former chairman Don Birkett recommended the listing of cheaper
generic drugs in place of their more expensive counterparts
while another former committee member Sian Hughes suggested the
government could increase the co-payment made by patients for
those drugs listed under the PBS.
The purge of the PBAC is undoubtedly in preparation for a major
assault on subsidised pharmaceuticals. According to the Doctors
Reform Society, the Liberals plan to bankrupt the PBS. In a recent
press statement, Society president Dr Tim Woodruff suggested the
following scenario: new pro-industry PABC members fast track the
approval of a range of new pharmaceuticals on terms favourable
to the drug companies. Faced with a sizeable cost blowout, the
government is forced to remove its support for subsidised medicine.
The insurance companies move in, forcing people to take out private
cover against the cost of medication, with the PBS existing in
an emasculated form as a threadbare and ineffectual safety
net for the poor.
See Also:
Australian professor warns that poor
will have to pay more for drugs
[17 February 2001]
A multi billion dollar
transfusion to private health insurers in Australia
[4 October 2000]
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