Pharmaceutical policy in the new European Commission will be developed jointly
by two Commissioners – one for the single market, industry and enterprises, and
the other for health, Commission President-elect Jean-Claude Juncker has
announced. “Responsibility for medicines and pharmaceutical products will stay with the
Directorate-General for Health because I agree with you that medicines are not
goods like any other,” the new President told the Members of the European
Parliament (MEP) this week, formally acknowledging that he had abandoned his
plans to move responsibility for drugs and medical technology away from the
Directorate-General for Health and Consumers (DG SANCO) and give it back to the
D-G for the Single Market, Industry and Enterprise.
Source: PharmaTimes
European Parliament
MEPs, along with patient groups, had condemned Mr Juncker’s initial plan,
stating that no DG should combine the lead role for medicines policy with the
lead role for the promotion of the pharmaceutical industry. But in the new Commission, relevant policy will be developed jointly by the
new health commissioner, Vytenis Andriukatis, and the industry commissioner,
Elzbieta Bienkowska, Mr Juncker told Parliament, and he went on to praise the
“incredible talents” shown by Ms Bienkowska at her hearing.
Confirmation of the new President’s change of heart has been warmly
welcomed by health and consumer advocacy groups across the European Union (EU).
A statement signed by 35 public health organisations says his announcement
“indicates that the safety and security of Europeans are prioritised in the new
Commission.” They also applaud his declaration, made in response to their
concerns, that “as President of the Commission, I will make sure that public
health will be at least as important in our policies as internal market
considerations.” In his speech to Parliament, Mr Juncker also said that his Commission “will
not only look different but will also work differently. Not as the sum of its
parts, but as a team. Not through silo mentalities, clusters and portfolio
frontiers, but as a collegiate, political body.”
This pledge has been welcomed by the European Federation of Pharmaceutical
Industries and Associations (EFPIA), which has applauded Mr Juncker’s “strong
commitment to overcome silo mentalities.” EFPIA also says it “looks forward to
the Directorate-General health’s contribution to a comprehensive strategic
agenda by the European Commission for the pharmaceutical industry in Europe,”
and urges the Commission to “show strong political commitment towards this
strategic agenda.”
In September, the industry group denied that it had lobbied to get
responsibility for the industry moved from DG SANCO, which had held this role
since 2009.
Source: PharmaTimes
European Parliament
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