Transfers of Value go public on 1 July 2016
by Cliona Christle and Róise NicGhráinne
Are you ready to disclose?
All Transfers of Value (ToV) from 2015 must be disclosed
publicly via the Irish Pharmaceutical Healthcare Association (IPHA) central reporting
system by 1 July 2016. This relates to all ToVs that were made by
pharmaceutical companies to Healthcare Providers (HCPs) and Healthcare
Organisations (HCOs) in connection with the development and sale of
prescription only medicinal products for human use. In addition, a company may
choose to disclose ToVs on its own website.
Who does this apply to?
Disclosure obligations only apply to member companies (a
"Company") (research-based pharmaceutical and consumer healthcare
companies that manufacture and/or market proprietary medicinal products in
Ireland/EU) of the IPHA or the European Federation of Pharmaceutical Industries
and Associations (EFPIA). It also applies to companies who have voluntarily
adopted the Disclosure Code 1. The Disclosure Code affects Companies in 33
European countries, including Ireland.
What constitutes a ToV?
If a Company makes a donation or a grant to a HCO, or
contributes to the cost of an event (sponsorship agreement (HCO only),
registration fees, travel and accommodation) for a HCP/HCO, or pays fees for a
service/consultancy, including related expenses to a HCP/HCO, then it must
comply with the disclosure obligations. Direct and indirect ToVs must be
disclosed. Direct transfers are those which are made directly by the Company
for the benefit of the recipient, whereas indirect transfers are those that are
made on behalf of the Company for the benefit of the recipient.
Excluded ToVs
Over the counter medicines (OTCs)2
Items of medical utility
Meals/drinks
Samples
Items in the ordinary course of sale and purchase
ToV between a member Company and a HCP from a non-EFPIA country,
in a non-EFPIA country.
When does a ToV become disclosable?
A ToV becomes disclosable when a transfer occurs. In other
words, once a payment has actually been made by the Company to a HCP/HCO the
obligation to disclose arises. However, in some instances where the HCP/HCO
does not actually receive the benefit of the ToV, such may not need to be
disclosed.
Disclosures will be made on an annual basis and the reporting
period consists of a full calendar year. The first reporting year is
2015, therefore any ToVs made prior to this will not be disclosed.
Disclosures must be made within six months after the end of the reporting
period and should remain in the public domain for three years following such,
unless a HCP's consent is withdrawn (under Data Protection law).
What you need to know as a Company
A Company must document all ToVs that it makes directly or
indirectly to a HCP/HCO (including all ToVs in 2015). Before these ToVs
can be disclosed, consent must be obtained from a HCP/HCO. It is
recommended that consent be express and in written form. A Company can
obtain the consent of a HCP/HCO at the time of making a ToV and ideally consent
should be incorporated into its contract with a HCP/HCO. Pre-existing contracts
should be reviewed to ensure that there are no restrictions on the disclosure
of information. HCPs and HCOs should be fully informed as to what
information will be disclosed publicly, on what platform, when, for how long
and that consent can be withdrawn (in the case of a HCP).
Where a HCP/HCO does not consent to the disclosure of his/her
individual information, disclosure on an aggregate basis shall be made.
Disclosures need to be made in line with the national code of
the country in which the HCP or HCO has their principal practice or physical
address. For Ireland, a Company must use the EFPIA3 template in making the
disclosures which must be submitted to the IPHA central reporting system prior
to 1 July 2016.
What you need to know as a HCP
A Company should not disclose individual HCP information without
his/her prior consent and knowledge. HCP consent can be withdrawn in
relation to individual disclosures at any time, however disclosure will still
be made on an aggregate basis. Guidelines from the IPHA in relation to an
acceptable timeframe for the removal of a HCP’s individual information, are
expected shortly. Where an aggregate disclosure is made, a HCP’s
individual information can still be made available to authorities upon request.
What HCP information will be disclosed?
Disclosure on an individual basis includes: – full name; city of
principal practice; country of principal practice; principal practice address;
identifier registration number (optional); annual amount of: event registration
fees/travel and accommodation; fee for service and consultancy; and related
expenses. It is only necessary to disclose information applicable at the date
of the transfer.
What you need to know as a HCO
It is recommended that HCOs review contracts that they have in
place with a Company so as to ascertain whether or not the Company can in fact
make a disclosure on an individual basis. Prior notice to a HCO should be
provided before disclosure, and consent should be sought by the Company to
individual disclosure of information. Where such a disclosure is not
permitted under the HCO contract with a Company, or where consent is not
provided, information will then be published in aggregate. The right to
withdraw consent under Data Protection law does not apply to HCOs, therefore a
HCO should seek to negotiate such a clause in its contract with the Company.
What HCO information will be disclosed
Disclosure on an individual basis includes: – full name; city of
registration; country of principal practice; principal practice address; annual
amount of: donations and grants, sponsorship agreements, registration fees,
travel and accommodation; fee for service and consultancy; and related
expenses. Only information at the date of transfer need be disclosed.
The central reporting system will go live to the public on 1
July 2016.
For more information please contact Cliona Christle or Róise
NicGhráinne at A&L Goodbody.
1. The Disclosure Code at Annex V of IPHA Code of Practice for the
Pharmaceutical Industry, Version 8.1 (adopts the EFPIA Code on Transfers of
Value from Pharmaceutical Companies to Healthcare Professionals and Healthcare
Organisations).
2. If OTCs are also available by prescription (e.g. reimbursement
condition) then ToVs relating to such OTCs are disclosable.
3. The EFPIA template is available at the back
of the Disclosure Code. A methodology note must accompany the template.