According to industry officials, the first line of HIV/AIDS drugs costs about 3,000 rupees ($50) for one month’s supply in the retail market in a country where, according to the World Bank, one in three were living on under $1.25 a day in 2009/10.
Drugmakers in India, the world’s largest source of cheap generics, have been hit in the recent past by a raft of regulatory changes that included expansion of a list of drugs whose prices are capped.
“There are always payment issues when working with the Indian government,” said Ramesh Adige, a pharmaceutical industry consultant and former executive director of Ranbaxy Laboratories Ltd.
“Lots of companies say they are getting nothing out of these programs, but they cannot ignore the market,” he said.
Delhi Network of Positive People, a trust that works with HIV/AIDS patients, is planning to file a lawsuit against the government over the shortage of the life-saving drugs in various states, said its president, Vikas Ahuja. (Reuters)[eap_ad_3]