Gujarat FDCA detects 8 cases of non-compliance to NPPA's ceiling price norms on cardiac stents
The Gujarat Food and Drug Control Administration (FDCA) has detected 8 private hospitals in Ahmedabd for non-compliance to National Pharmaceutical Pricing Authority (NPPA) ceiling price norms which stipulate prices of coronary stents at Rs.7,260 for bare metal ones and Rs.29,600 for drug eluting variety with effect from February 14, 2017.
This is following Gujarat FDCA's plan to conduct inspections on 60 cardiac centres across the state to check price compliance at the point of care. The survey is aimed to check whether hospitals and cardiac centres across the state are complying to ceiling price norms stipulated as per the order so that patients are not overcharged.
Following the inspections a week ago, the state regulator has directed the concerned hospitals to refund the patients who have been overcharged and some of them have even refunded the overcharged amount in line with the NPPA price capping exercise.
“Hospitals have paid back as much as Rs.20,000 to Rs.40,000 of overcharged amount per cardiac intervention and nearly Rs.2 lakh to Rs.4 lakh has been recovered from each hospital based on the Gujarat FDCA action,” said Gujarat FDCA Commissioner Dr HG Koshia.
On February 14, 2017, NPPA announced cut in prices of coronary stents by up to 85% by capping them at Rs.7,260 for bare metal ones and Rs.29,600 for drug eluting variety.The step was taken to fix a standardised specification of stent and its MRP to stop fleecing patients.
Meanwhile, advocate Birender Sangwan, whose PIL led to slashing prices of cardiac stents this year in February, is again planning to file another set of PILs at the Delhi High Court (HC) against hospitals on whom complaints of overcharging have been received at the drug pricing regulator NPPA office.
However, Maharashtra Food and Drug Administration (FDA) recently in its verification reports have ascertained that no hospital in Mumbai, Pune and Nashik were found violating the ceiling prices for cardiac stents as stipulated by the drug pricing regulator NPPA.
The state regulator had stepped up its vigilance as a part of its larger plan to detect overpricing of stents in government and private hospitals subsequent to NPPA receiving complaints about stents being sold at higher prices at KEM Hospital, Lilavati Hospital and a few hospitals in Pune and Nashik.
This was following 2 complaints of overcharging received recently against KEM hospital, Mumbai. The first complaint was received on February 26, followed by another complaint on March 1, 2017. The other hospitals include Lilavati Hospital, Bandra, the complaint of which was received on February 23, 2017 and Bhaktivedanta Hospital, Mira Road, Thane, the complaint of which was received on March 4, 2017.
Two other hospitals in Maharashtra against whom complaints were received include Pune Hospital and Research Centre, Pune, the complaint of which was received on March 4, 2017 and Six Sigma Medicare and Research Ltd, Nashik, the complaint of which was received on February 25, 2017.
NPPA has directed hospitals/nursing homes/clinics utilizing coronary stents shall specifically and separately mention the cost of the coronary stent along with its brand name, name of the manufacturer/importer/batch number. and other details, if any, in their billing to the patients or their representatives.