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Should Financial Incentives be Used to Differentially Reward Me-Too and Innovative Drugs?

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Should Financial Incentives be Used to Differentially Reward Me-Too and Innovative Drugs?

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Brita Pekarsky PharmacoEconomics, 2010, vol. 28, issue 1, pages 1-17 Abstract: Strategies to change the existing mix of innovative and ‘me-too’ drugs are intended to increase societal value of a given investment in R&D by providing an incentive for firms to invest in drugs that are more likely to be clinically innovative. How can financial incentives be used to change this mix? Will a strategy have its intended consequence or will it have the unintended outcome of reducing the rate at which the population burden of disease is reduced? The perspective of this review is a country such as Australia, Canada or the UK that has universal health insurance and a drug reimbursement process that is informed by economic evidence. A review of the literature was performed and the views of both the proponents and the opponents of such strategies and the mechanisms by which they could be implemented were summarized. The debate is based largely on hypothesized responses by firms to changes in incentiv

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