Published:
Research and Markets: Lebanon Pharmaceuticals and Healthcare Report Q4 2009
DUBLIN - (BUSINESS WIRE) - Research and Markets (http://www.researchandmarkets.com/research/48b0c6/lebanon_pharmaceut)
has announced the addition of the "Lebanon
Pharmaceuticals and Healthcare Report Q4 2009" report to their
offering.
Lebanon Pharmaceuticals and Healthcare Report provides industry
professionals and strategists, corporate analysts, pharmaceutical
associations, government departments and regulatory bodies with
independent forecasts and competitive intelligence on Lebanon's
pharmaceuticals and healthcare industry.
We expect total drug spending in Lebanon to increase from under US$500mn
in 2008 to US$605mn in 2013, a compound annual growth rate (CAGR) of
3.9% in US dollar terms, with 1.75% of GDP dedicated to pharmaceutical
expenditure by 2013.
The Minister of Health, Mohammad Jawad Khalifeh, has held the position
since 2005 and has dramatically reformed drug pricing in the country,
highlighting the fact that other countries in the region with similar
economies were paying significantly less for medicines than Lebanon.
Following a lengthy period of pressure, the government finally reduced
average pharmaceutical prices by 5%, with the momentum and support
gained in the process providing the impetus for other regulatory
changes, including the introduction of transparency guidelines.
Public sector health provisions have been scrutinised and challenged by
Khalifeh in light of high unmet demand for subsidised services. He said
the budget for the Ministry of Public Health in 2005 was only 3.5% of
GDP and subsequently the department ran into deficit every year. While a
small population will restrict growth, we believe government
subsidisation will do much to boost the drug market. More affordable
prices and access to hospitals will allow people to spend more on
medicines instead of forgoing treatment altogether.
Despite the price differences, there is little perceivable demand for
off-patent drugs outside of the public healthcare sector. However, the
prescribing habits of doctors are a major factor in determining demand.
The lack of transparency and registration notification to physicians for
new generic drugs exacerbates this problem. While government websites
aim to clarify which patented medicines have a generic equivalent in the
country, the low exposure of off-patent medicines to the patient is the
reason the CAGR for this sector is only 3.85% between 2008 and 2013.
The generic drug sector in Lebanon will experience slow growth over the
next five years, largely due to established partnerships between the
private sector and the government in determining procurement policies.
Critics of the Ministry of Public Health have said that importers and
wholesalers in the country cannot profit as much from selling generic
medicines as patented - an obvious incentive against ordering cheaper
drugs. In this sense, the pharmaceutical industry in Lebanon is not
being regulated in favour of the patient.
Another key issue is that the country lacks an internationally
accredited drug testing and analysis laboratory, and therefore relies on
patented medicines as these are already approved by the US Food and Drug
Administration (FDA) or the European Medicines Agency (EMEA). Relying on
international regulatory standards is a means of assuring quality if the
country does not have the means to do so itself. The expense of
reopening a laboratory that closed in 2007 remains off-putting and
continues to inhibit progress. However, Lebanon's pharmaceutical sector
cannot progress without a centralised drug testing laboratory and as a
result is set to remain restricted in terms of drug choice and market
growth.
Key Topics Covered:
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Executive Summary
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SWOT Analysis
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Business Environment Ratings
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Market Summary
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Regulatory Regime
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Industry Developments
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Industry Forecast Scenario
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Competitive Landscape
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Company Profiles
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Global Assumptions
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Country Snapshot: Lebanon Demographic Data
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Methodology
Companies Mentioned:
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Pfizer
-
Novartis
-
Merck & Co
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Johnson & Johnson
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Sanofi-Aventis
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Abbott Laboratories
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Chalhoub Pharmaceuticals (CHAPHA)
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Alfa Laboratories
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Algorithm
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Codipha
For more information visit http://www.researchandmarkets.com/research/48b0c6/lebanon_pharmaceut
Research and Markets
Laura Wood, Senior Manager,
press@researchandmarkets.com
U.S.
Fax: 646-607-1907
Fax (outside U.S.): +353-1-481-1716
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