School of Population and Public Health (Morgan), University of British Columbia, Vancouver, BC; Division of Health Policy and Insurance Research, Department of Population Medicine (Leopold, Wagner), Harvard Medical School and Harvard Pilgrim Health Care Institute, Boston, Mass.
CMAJ. 2017 Jun 12;189(23):E794-E799. doi: 10.1503/cmaj.161481.
Managing expenditures on pharmaceuticals is important for health systems to sustain universal access to necessary medicines. We sought to estimate the size and sources of differences in expenditures on primary care medications among high-income countries with universal health care systems.
We compared data on the 2015 volume and cost per day of primary care prescription drug therapies purchased in 10 high-income countries with various systems of universal health care coverage (7 from Europe, in addition to Australia, Canada and New Zealand). We measured total per capita expenditure on 6 categories of primary care prescription drugs: hypertension treatments, pain medications, lipid-lowering medicines, noninsulin diabetes treatments, gastrointestinal preparations and antidepressants. We quantified the contributions of 5 drivers of the observed differences in per capita expenditures.
Across countries, the average annual per capita expenditure on the primary care medicines studied varied by more than 600%: from $23 in New Zealand to $171 in Switzerland. The volume of therapies purchased varied by 41%: from 198 days per capita in Norway to 279 days per capita in Germany. Most of the differences in average expenditures per capita were driven by a combination of differences in the average mix of drugs selected within therapeutic categories and differences in the prices paid for medicines prescribed.
Significant international differences in average expenditures on primary care medications are driven primarily by factors that contribute to the average daily cost of therapy, rather than differences in the volume of therapy used. Average expenditures were lower among single-payer financing systems that appeared to promote lower prices and the selection of lower-cost treatment options.
管理药品支出对于医疗体系维持全民获得必要药物的机会至关重要。我们旨在评估具有全民医疗保健系统的高收入国家间初级保健药物支出差异的规模和来源。
我们比较了 10 个高收入国家(除澳大利亚、加拿大和新西兰外,还有 7 个来自欧洲)在 2015 年购买的各种全民医疗保健覆盖系统下初级保健处方药的数量和每天的费用数据。我们衡量了 6 类初级保健处方药的人均总支出:高血压治疗药物、止痛药物、降脂药物、非胰岛素糖尿病治疗药物、胃肠制剂和抗抑郁药。我们量化了导致人均支出差异的 5 个驱动因素的贡献。
在各个国家,所研究的初级保健药物的人均年支出差异超过 600%:从新西兰的 23 美元到瑞士的 171 美元。购买的治疗药物量差异为 41%:从挪威的人均 198 天到德国的人均 279 天。人均支出的大部分差异主要是由于治疗类药物选择的平均组合差异以及所开药物价格差异的共同作用所致。
初级保健药物的人均支出存在显著的国际差异,主要是由导致治疗日平均成本差异的因素造成的,而不是使用的治疗量差异所致。单一付费者融资系统的平均支出较低,这似乎促进了较低的价格和较低成本的治疗方案的选择。