Joint Statement
Minister of Health, Associate Minister of Health
Funding to expand drug buying
The government's drug-buying agency gets a permanent increase in funding in Budget 2007, Minister of Health Pete Hodgson
and Associate Health Minister Peter Dunne announced today.
Pharmac will be allocated another $20 million a year for more medicines for both people in the community and those
needing pharmaceutical treatments in hospital such as cancer patients.
The funding provided to the country's District Health Boards is a permanent increase in Pharmac's budget, and is
additional to the annual increase already agreed with DHBs.
It will boost the agency's ability by $5.4 million for community pharmaceuticals that include preventative treatments
such as asthma medications like inhalants and statins for lowering cholesterol.
Mr Dunne said, "This increase in Pharmac's budget is timely in view of the work now underway to develop a National
Medicines Strategy focusing on the quality use and availability of medicines for New Zealanders, and is a strong signal
of the government's commitment."
To help district health boards fund more cancer treatments, which are often costly, $14 million of the new money is
tagged to hospital cancer treatments.
Included in this is an allocation for the cost of a potential trial on the breast cancer drug herceptin.
"Drugs for the treatment of cancer is an area where things are constantly developing and changing and New Zealanders can
be assured their health system is keeping up with those changes," Pete Hodgson said.
"I have also allocated $5 million to fund the cost of a potential trial to compare nine weeks concurrent use of the
breast cancer drug herceptin with 12 months' concurrent use."
ENDS