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How does the operation of PHARMAC's 'Community Exceptional ...

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The cost-utility analysis system has been well discussed in this <strong>the</strong>sis and <strong>the</strong><br />

strengths and weaknesses <strong>of</strong> <strong>the</strong> system do not need to be re-litigated here.<br />

<strong>How</strong>ever, Theme 4, PHARMAC - No Stated Philosophy confirmed that<br />

PHARMAC policies operate on a comparative cost analysis as <strong>the</strong> basis for its<br />

utilitarian decision making. Contributors for <strong>the</strong> research have stated that this<br />

criterion dominates all o<strong>the</strong>r decision making criteria. The reason for this is to<br />

enable PHARMAC (through its allocative committees and panels) to make<br />

decisions, <strong>the</strong> consequences <strong>of</strong> which do not exceed PHARMAC’s budgets.<br />

As far as <strong>the</strong> measure <strong>of</strong> clinical effectiveness is concerned in determining<br />

which medicines PHARMAC will subsidise, data presented in this research<br />

indicated that <strong>the</strong> use <strong>of</strong> committees and panels <strong>of</strong> experts to examine available<br />

research and published journal articles has served PHARMAC very well. The<br />

NZORD suggested that PHARMAC’s panels may not be expert enough when<br />

dealing with very rare diseases. The McCormack Review <strong>of</strong> High Cost<br />

Medicines (PHARMAC, 2006) suggested that paediatric Community<br />

<strong>Exceptional</strong> Circumstances claims were not adequately understood by <strong>the</strong><br />

panel members.<br />

PHARMAC’s non-economic criteria, which aim to meet <strong>the</strong> Medicine Strategy’s<br />

aspirational goals, have been shown to be less important to PHARMAC than<br />

economic considerations. This raises <strong>the</strong> question why <strong>does</strong> PHARMAC have<br />

o<strong>the</strong>r criteria, if <strong>the</strong>y <strong>the</strong>se criteria can never override <strong>the</strong> affordability criterion?<br />

One answer to this question is that PHARMAC’s economic calculation is very<br />

important to Ministers as a political imperative. This was confirmed in <strong>the</strong><br />

interviews with both past and present Health Ministers. They stated in Chapter<br />

5 that despite <strong>the</strong> debate about cost-utility analysis and whe<strong>the</strong>r or not it was an<br />

adequate system, it is a system which is internationally recognised and <strong>does</strong><br />

represent some level <strong>of</strong> comparative economic analysis. On this basis,<br />

Ministers stated that <strong>the</strong>re was no political appetite to change this way <strong>of</strong> doing<br />

things. The Horn Report to <strong>the</strong> Minister <strong>of</strong> Health in 2010 sought to encourage<br />

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