Reimbursement Lag of New Drugs Under Taiwan's National Health Insurance System Compared With United Kingdom, Canada, Australia, Japan, and South Korea
Journal
Clinical and translational science
Journal Volume
13
Journal Issue
5
Pages
916
Date Issued
2020-09
Author(s)
Abstract
Drug lag-delayed approval or reimbursement-is a major barrier to accessing cutting-edge drugs. Unlike approval lag, reimbursement lag is under-researched. We investigated the key determinants of reimbursement lag under Taiwan National Health Insurance (NHI), and compared this lag with those in the United Kingdom, Canada, Australia, Japan, and South Korea. Using retrospective data on 190 new NHI-reimbursed drugs from 2007 to 2014, we studied reimbursement lag in Taiwan vs. other countries, and investigated associated factors using generalized linear models (GLMs). The median reimbursement lags during before ("first-generation") and after ("second-generation") NHI drug reimbursement scheme in Taiwan were 378 and 458 days, respectively. The "first-generation" lag was shorter only than that in South Korea, whereas the "second-generation" lag only exceeded those of the United Kingdom and Japan. In GLM models, higher drug expenditure and the introduction of the "second-generation" NHI were two statistically significant parameters associated with reimbursement lag among antineoplastic and immunomodulating agents. For other drug classes, the reimbursement price proposed by pharmaceutical companies and use of price-volume agreements were two statistically significant parameters associated with longer reimbursement lags. The current reimbursement lag in Taiwan is longer than 1 year, but only longer than those of the United Kingdom and Japan. The determinants differ between drug categories. A specific review process for antineoplastic and immunomodulating drugs may expedite reimbursement. There is a clear need for systematic data collection and analysis to ascertain factors associated with reimbursement lag and thereby inform future policy making.
SDGs
Other Subjects
antineoplastic agent; immunomodulating agent; drug; Article; Australia; Canada; comparative study; drug classification; drug cost; drug reimbursement lag; health care access; health insurance; Japan; pharmacy (shop); priority journal; reimbursement; retrospective study; South Korea; Taiwan; United Kingdom; economics; health care delivery; management; organization and management; public health; reimbursement; time factor; Australia; Canada; Health Services Accessibility; Insurance, Health, Reimbursement; Japan; National Health Programs; Pharmaceutical Preparations; Policy Making; Republic of Korea; Retrospective Studies; Taiwan; Time Factors; United Kingdom
Publisher
WILEY
Type
journal article