German lawmakers passed a bill that would more than double the discount on branded medicines drugmakers must provide the government
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Good morning, everyone. Damian Garde here, filling in for Ed Silverman at Pharmalot’s satellite campus along the East River, where today’s cup of stimulation is filled not with coffee but rather a smoothie of curious color and questionable contents (what exactly is an “adaptogen”?). Anyway it’s Friday, as you’re almost certainly aware, and here are some tidbits to help you through the waning hours of another working week. …
German lawmakers passed a bill that would more than double the discount on branded medicines drugmakers must provide to the government, Reuters reports. The policy, part of an effort to plug a sizable budget gap in the country’s health insurance system, would increase the mandatory rebate from 7% to 15.5%. Industry groups have said the bill, if it clears Germany’s upper chamber, would deter investment and imperil the country’s access to new medicines.
The rapid rise of China’s biotech industry has led some American drug developers to do their work in near total secrecy, the Wall Street Journal observes. U.S. startups are increasingly loath to publish early data, disclose their scientific ambitions, or even publicize which diseases they hope to treat, all in fear that nimble Chinese firms will use that information to whip up competing drugs and beat them to the punch of starting clinical trials.
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