<p>The EU on Wednesday is to unveil a long-awaited proposed reform of legislation governing pharmaceutical drugs to make them cheaper, prevent shortages and speed up delivery of new compounds.</p>.<p>The overhaul aims to bring "timely and equitable access for patients to affordable drugs" in the bloc, EU health commissioner Stella Kyriakides tweeted.</p>.<p>The reform is the biggest in two decades, and has in part been informed by Brussels' swift, concerted action during the Covid pandemic that underscored the benefits of less-burdensome procedures, greater transparency and joint measures.</p>.<p><strong>Also Read | <a href="https://www.deccanherald.com/business/business-news/google-amazon-meta-microsoft-15-others-subject-to-eu-content-rules-1212840.html" target="_blank">Google, Amazon, Meta, Microsoft, 15 others subject to EU content rules</a></strong><br /><br />The pharmaceutical industry has been intensively lobbying ahead of the presentation of the proposals.</p>.<p>A leak in February of a draft version of them sparked criticism from companies worried that the exclusive period they had over selling new drugs could be shortened from 10 years to eight.</p>.<p>The European Federation of Pharmaceutical Industries and Associations warned against steps that could constrain innovation.</p>.<p>While the European Commission aims to bring down the cost of medicines, it doesn't have the power to set prices in the European Union.</p>.<p>That is the prerogative of national governments who negotiate with pharmaceutical groups.</p>.<p>The EU executive is also intent on tackling shortages of drugs for rare diseases, and unequal access to medicines across the 27-nation bloc, especially in eastern member states.</p>.<p>Another challenge to be tackled is increasing microbial resistance to existing antibiotics, which each year leads to 35,000 deaths in the European Union.</p>.<p>Because antibiotics are meant to be taken in moderate, defined doses they are less lucrative to pharmaceutical companies than blockbuster drugs.</p>.<p>To address that problem, the commission is looking at introducing transferable vouchers that would allow a company coming up with a new, effective antibiotic to apply a lengthened period of exclusivity to another more profitable drug, or to sell that right to another company.</p>.<p>Around half the EU member states, including France, Belgium and the Netherlands, are wary of that idea though, worried it would weigh on national health systems.</p>.<p>The European Consumer Organisation has also come out against that proposal.</p>.<p>"But so far, no one has proposed a better system," said one EU lawmaker, Peter Liese, who is also a medical doctor.</p>.<p>He said that virtually no new antibiotic had been produced in 20 years. On this issue and the others the commission is proposing, "innovation-friendly regulation is indispensable," he said.</p>.<p>The commission also wants a faster approval process to get new drugs to market faster, as happened with Covid vaccines.</p>.<p>And it is suggesting a measure to force companies to be more transparent about the stocks of drugs they have, so that any looming shortfalls can be tackled earlier on.</p>.<p>For Pauline Londeix, co-founder of OTMeds, a French group monitoring levels of transparency on drugs policies, "a centralised system of alerts on shortages goes in the right direction but is not enough in itself".</p>.<p>She argues that the EU should consider "coordinated action at the European level for the part-public production of essential medicines".</p>
<p>The EU on Wednesday is to unveil a long-awaited proposed reform of legislation governing pharmaceutical drugs to make them cheaper, prevent shortages and speed up delivery of new compounds.</p>.<p>The overhaul aims to bring "timely and equitable access for patients to affordable drugs" in the bloc, EU health commissioner Stella Kyriakides tweeted.</p>.<p>The reform is the biggest in two decades, and has in part been informed by Brussels' swift, concerted action during the Covid pandemic that underscored the benefits of less-burdensome procedures, greater transparency and joint measures.</p>.<p><strong>Also Read | <a href="https://www.deccanherald.com/business/business-news/google-amazon-meta-microsoft-15-others-subject-to-eu-content-rules-1212840.html" target="_blank">Google, Amazon, Meta, Microsoft, 15 others subject to EU content rules</a></strong><br /><br />The pharmaceutical industry has been intensively lobbying ahead of the presentation of the proposals.</p>.<p>A leak in February of a draft version of them sparked criticism from companies worried that the exclusive period they had over selling new drugs could be shortened from 10 years to eight.</p>.<p>The European Federation of Pharmaceutical Industries and Associations warned against steps that could constrain innovation.</p>.<p>While the European Commission aims to bring down the cost of medicines, it doesn't have the power to set prices in the European Union.</p>.<p>That is the prerogative of national governments who negotiate with pharmaceutical groups.</p>.<p>The EU executive is also intent on tackling shortages of drugs for rare diseases, and unequal access to medicines across the 27-nation bloc, especially in eastern member states.</p>.<p>Another challenge to be tackled is increasing microbial resistance to existing antibiotics, which each year leads to 35,000 deaths in the European Union.</p>.<p>Because antibiotics are meant to be taken in moderate, defined doses they are less lucrative to pharmaceutical companies than blockbuster drugs.</p>.<p>To address that problem, the commission is looking at introducing transferable vouchers that would allow a company coming up with a new, effective antibiotic to apply a lengthened period of exclusivity to another more profitable drug, or to sell that right to another company.</p>.<p>Around half the EU member states, including France, Belgium and the Netherlands, are wary of that idea though, worried it would weigh on national health systems.</p>.<p>The European Consumer Organisation has also come out against that proposal.</p>.<p>"But so far, no one has proposed a better system," said one EU lawmaker, Peter Liese, who is also a medical doctor.</p>.<p>He said that virtually no new antibiotic had been produced in 20 years. On this issue and the others the commission is proposing, "innovation-friendly regulation is indispensable," he said.</p>.<p>The commission also wants a faster approval process to get new drugs to market faster, as happened with Covid vaccines.</p>.<p>And it is suggesting a measure to force companies to be more transparent about the stocks of drugs they have, so that any looming shortfalls can be tackled earlier on.</p>.<p>For Pauline Londeix, co-founder of OTMeds, a French group monitoring levels of transparency on drugs policies, "a centralised system of alerts on shortages goes in the right direction but is not enough in itself".</p>.<p>She argues that the EU should consider "coordinated action at the European level for the part-public production of essential medicines".</p>