You can use your existing Medical Independent, MediLearning or PharmacistCPD account to log in.
Established in 2010, along with its sister publication The Medical Independent, our stated aim is to investigate and analyse the major issues affecting healthcare and the medical profession in Ireland. The Medical Independent has won a number of awards for its investigative journalism, and its stories are frequently picked up by national digital, broadcast and print media. The Medical Independent is published by GreenCross Publishing.
Address: Top Floor, 111 Rathmines Road Lr, Dublin 6
Tel: 353 (01) 441 0024
GreenCross Publishing is owned by Graham Cooke.
Sign up now for ease of access to The Medical Independent, Ireland’s most frequently published medical newspaper, delivering award-winning news and investigative reporting.
You are reading 1 of 2 free-access articles allowed for 30 days
The Covid-19 pandemic has not yet led to a delay in the upcoming talks on a new framework agreement for medicines between the State and the pharmaceutical industry, this newspaper has been told.
“The four-year Framework Agreement on the Supply and Pricing of Medicines was signed in July 2016 between the Department of Health, the HSE, and the Irish Pharmaceutical Healthcare Association (IPHA) and is not due to expire until 31 July,” a Department spokesperson told the Medical Independent (MI) on Wednesday 15 April.
When asked whether the Covid-19 pandemic risked delaying the talks, the spokesperson said “preparations are underway for the commencement of negotiations on a new framework agreement with industry.”
A spokesperson for the IPHA told MI that “there is no date yet on the planned commencement of negotiations”.
The framework negotiations will not include discussion regarding any future Covid-19 vaccine as the Department spokesperson noted that “in accordance with the definitions included in Clause 1, subsection 2 of the Framework Agreement, the definition of ‘medicines’ for the purposes of the agreement specifically excludes blood products, vaccines, and non-reimbursable non-prescription products”.
Separately a spokesperson for the Department told MI that the Irish Government “is strongly supportive of equitable access to medicines, vaccines and diagnostics, including in relation to Covid-19.”
“The EU and its member states including Ireland are pursuing innovative approaches to combating the Covid-19 pandemic, including coordinated research and development effort, through the WHO and in partnership with other WHO member states and international organisations.”
The President of the Medical Council has called on doctors to avail of training opportunities to...
The average age of individuals with a confirmed case of Covid-19 in Ireland from 4 June to...
Dr Vincent Maher, Consultant Cardiologist, Tallaght Hospital, Dublin, told delegates that there could be up to...
An update to the Covid-19 vaccination programme as a result of the threat posed by the...
There is “no central collation” of data on Covid-19 staff derogations during the pandemic in either...
Leave a Reply
You must be logged in to post a comment.