Better together

by IainBate 3. July 2012 12:37

Stephen Whitehead outlines the ABPI’s latest initiatives to facilitate collaboration – and how sales professionals have a key part to play .

Better together - Pharmaceutical Field This year the ABPI is launching a Regional Partnership team to help the industry establish and develop sustainable relationships with the NHS at a regional level. The team, deploying experienced industry professionals in each of the four regional SHA clusters, aims to promote and facilitate collaborative working as a means to improve patient outcomes. Its key objectives are to identify and remove existing barriers to accessing innovative medicines, to help develop regional partnership projects and to share best practice across the country. The initiative reflects the growing recognition that improving patient health in a constrained financial environment will be best achieved by adopting a more collaborative approach. And there is an increasing consensus across both parties that, after years of developing adversarial relationships, the direction of travel towards NHS/industry partnerships is the right one for patient care.

But progress is an incremental process. The perceived cultural barriers that have historically plagued the relationship and impacted access will not be overcome overnight. “Trust and reputation has widely been acknowledged as an issue for industry – but it’s getting better,” says Stephen Whitehead, CEO at the ABPI. “In fact, it has dramatically improved. You can 12 see that from the Innovation, Health & Wealth (IHW) review: the NHS really wants to partner with pharma. In turn, as an industry we know that we are operating within restricted NHS budgets, and that we need to make it clear that we are not always there to sell something. Joint working is not about developing something that can help companies achieve a sales target on a quarterly basis, it’s about establishing a new way of working that will redefine the relationship between us and the customer. That will take time.”

In an evolutionary process, the ABPI appears determined to take the lead – to trail-blaze the concept of partnership working from a top-line strategic position and help ease the concerns of more anxious NHS customers. “The driving platform for joint working from the side of the industry should be the ABPI,” says Stephen. “We established the joint working protocol with the DH, and have developed the code of practice and regulatory infrastructure to enable it to happen. We’ve therefore created the headroom to allow partnerships to be established. Most parts of the NHS have understood and grasped this. It’s now up to us to lead, and for companies to take the opportunities within that.”

IMPROVING ACCESS

With access to NHS customers a perennial problem for UK pharma, the battle to develop the joint working agenda is a challenging one for individual companies. Medical sales professionals are tasked with advancing discussions, but attempts are often stymied due to diminishing levels of customer access. The ABPI believes its NHS Partnerships initiative will play a major part in raising awareness of partnership working, and overcoming access issues on an industry-wide basis. “NHS Partnerships will help industry
engage with key NHS stakeholders in England and ensure partnership conversations happen at a regional level. It’s not about individual products – we will not be talking about those – but we will be a facilitator of dialogue around joint working, aligned with the partnership principles set out by David Nicholson. We will be looking closely at the national issues on uptake and access, and any policy that emerges around that – and reinforcing it locally. Critically, NHS Partnerships isn’t the creation of ‘talking shops’, it’s about being able to facilitate on the key issues – which are fundamentally about access and uptake of innovation.”

NHS Partnerships has already been welcomed by the Department of Health, whose Director of Innovation & Service Improvement, Miles Ayling, said: “The ABPI partnership team will help build stronger links between industry and the NHS, as described in IHW. Beyond medicines, we are also looking at how all concerned can share skills, expertise and knowledge to improve the health of UK patients and help transform lives.”

REPUTATION

The long-standing issue of industry mistrust does, at long last, seem to be fading within the NHS. This was reflected in the ABPI’s seat at the top table of discussions around IHW last year, and has been reinforced by Stephen Whitehead’s involvement on the IHW Implementation Board. In addition to the partnerships initiative, the ABPI (along with ABHI) has also established a series of pilot projects with the NHS Confederation to look at how joint working can make a difference in selected disease areas. Pilots are already underway in mental health, circulatory diseases, diabetes and long-term conditions. “This is about providing examples of best practice within the NHS so customers can understand what we mean and establish that there is nothing for them to be worried about,” says Stephen.

“We have a strong status, but we’ve not yet fully utilised it in the context of joint working capability. That’s what these initiatives have been set up to do. This is a whole new world and a very exciting one – ten years ago we could never have had these relationships. But now that we are here, we need to approach customers gently and appropriately, and work with the NHS collaboratively and co-operatively to ensure that we dispel any of those old misunderstandings.”

And so, in the new environment, what role will sales professionals and Key Account Management play in NHS engagement? “The role of sales is evolving quite rapidly,” says Stephen. “Sales engagement is increasingly about liaison, as well as detailing around a product. It’s about facilitating collaborative working – and the salesforce has a key role to play in this.”

Pathway to partnership

by IainBate 11. June 2012 11:21

Selling medicines in today’s marketplace should be built on partnership principles. ABPI CEO Stephen Whitehead talks exclusively to Pharmaceutical Field about the importance of NHS/industry partnerships.

Pathway to partnership - Pharmaceutical Field Back in 2009, Chris Brinsmead – then President of the ABPI – told Pharmaceutical Field that the future role of the pharma field force would be to facilitate partnerships between the NHS and industry. Three years later and the partnership agenda is slowly inching forward. Progress has been made, but adoption of a more collaborative approach across the country has been variable. As ever, there are early adopters, and those that wait. Last month, Pf led with an ABPI announcement that predicted the NHS and industry would ‘become partners within 3-5 years’. Why not now, came the familiar cry? Why not, indeed. The ABPI seems determined to address this.

This month, Pf spoke exclusively to Stephen Whitehead as he approached the first anniversary of his tenure as CEO at the ABPI. It is clear that, in challenging times for the UK industry as it battles to ensure that patients gain access to life-changing medical innovations, partnership sits at the heart of the ABPI agenda.

“There is a currently a big commitment to move the joint working agenda forward,” says Stephen. “Strategically, over the past 15 years there has been the emergence of many different influences on prescribing – NICE, local commissioning and local formularies are obvious examples. The industry now has to work with a wide variety of stakeholders to demonstrate the value of its medicines. And traditional sales representatives have to work with many different and more complex audiences than they used to when they were purely detailing. Increasingly, I think joint working is the vehicle best suited to satisfy these varying demands.”

Innovation Health and Wealth
The environment for a more collaborative approach is certainly improving. The Innovation Health and Wealth review last December reiterated the need for greater partnership working to help accelerate the adoption and diffusion of innovation in the UK. Crucially, it said that the NHS needed to be ‘open for business’ on partnership. As such, advocates from both parties are working hard to raise the profile (and the benefits) of the approach. But resistance and misunderstandings around joint working remain.

“One of the problems is that there are variable definitions and understandings of what joint working is,” says Stephen. “In simple terms, joint working is a partnership approach focused on solving a patient-driven issue. The industry has disease expertise, it knows how to manage conditions and has developed medicines in those areas. Joint working is about bringing that expertise together with the providers and focusing on patient outcomes. And often we can find cost savings in delivering those outcomes as well.”

Importantly, says Stephen, joint working is not sponsorship. “This is not about industry paying for something. Historically we have funded a lot of things and sometimes there is a real benefit to us bringing money to the table. But this is about changing that perception. Partnership is where two parties, with different strengths and weaknesses, come together to focus on a shared goal. In this case, that has to be patient care.

“The fundamental issue is about recognising the value of innovation and its implications for a pathway of care. By working together to find out how these medicines can be used appropriately, we can save money in the system, we can prevent unnecessary and costly hospitalisation and we can improve patient care.”

Medicines in the middle
In recent years, discussion has focused on whether UK pharma companies should reconsider their product-centric approach to customer engagement, and concentrate instead on developing services with the NHS. The caveat being that a specific medicine would form the core part of any service. But joint working is not an exact science. There is no one-size-fits-all solution – it’s simply about working together to establish the most appropriate approach in a given disease area. “It’s about products and services,” says Stephen. “Some of our members do offer services. But the way I look at joint working is that there is always a medicine in the middle of it – because that’s what we discover, develop and sell. In today’s environment, the only way that the value of that medicine can be truly realised is through joint working that reengineers the pathway of care.”

At present, most joint working initiatives are being built around new innovations – and are being used to redesign services and improve the care pathway. A good example of this is in the field of anticoagulants, where a number of new brands are coming to market. “The new class of drugs have gone through NICE have been recommended and should therefore be utilised,” says Stephen. “Old warfarin clinics should now be closing as patients move onto the new drugs. But to achieve that, and to free up the funds to be able to use the new innovations, we need to take other measures. And you can only do that, in my view, through joint working.

“It is my passionate belief that in most cases, innovative medicines will save money in the system – in the short, medium and long term. We simply need to work together to deliver it.”

Implications for pharma sales
The implications for pharmaceutical sales professionals are significant. While joint working is not always appropriate – aspects such as disease area or where a particular product is along its lifecycle are key factors in whether the approach is applicable – adopting a partnership approach most certainly is. “Joint working is a natural evolution of partnership principles,” says Stephen. “Industry engagement has changed from being a simple seller/buyer transaction, into seeking to work in partnership with customers to ensure the NHS properly maximises the value of medicines. The UK has a low price and a slow uptake of medicine – and as a consequence, the UK system is not as efficient as it could be. It would be more efficient if it adopted innovation more quickly. And if it did, we would certainly have better patient outcomes.

“Joint working is best used when you want to coax the system into innovation. It is not always the most appropriate approach. But whatever you have in your medicine chest, partnership is always applicable. In today’s marketplace, how you approach selling that medicine should always be built upon partnership principles.”

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