German pharmaceuticals firm Merck KGaA is no longer delivering cancer
drug Erbitux to Greek hospitals, a spokesman said on Saturday, the latest sign
of how an economic and budget crisis is hurting frontline public services.
Drugmakers raised concerns with EU leaders earlier this year over
supplies to the euro zone's crisis-hit southern half and Germany's Biotest in
June was the first to stop shipments to Greece because of unpaid bills.
Publicly-owned hospitals in some countries worst hit by the euro zone
debt crisis had been struggling to pay their bills, Merck's chief financial
officer, Matthias Zachert, was quoted as saying by German paper Boersen-Zeitung
in an interview on Saturday. He said however that the only country where Merck
had stopped deliveries was Greece. "It only affects Greece, where we have
been faced with many problems. It's just the one product," he told the
paper.
A spokesman for the company told Reuters that the drug concerned was
Erbitux and that ordinary Greeks can still purchase it from pharmacies. Some
countries have taken action to pay bills, such as in Spain, where the
government has said it will help hospitals to pay off debts. "That has
improved things, even though the situation should still be regarded as critical
for the coming years," Zachert said.
Erbitux is Merck's second best-selling prescription drug, bringing in
sales of 855 million euros ($1.1 billion) in 2011 from treating bowel cancer
and head and neck cancer. ($1 = 0.7785 euros)
Source: Chicago Tribune
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