Hungary's proposed 3-tier insurance system under health reform will mean more co-payments by patients
This article was originally published in Clinica
Executive Summary
Hungary's reform of its healthcare system is due to begin this month, as the government tries to balance its healthcare budget to meet the conditions for the introduction of the euro as the national currency in 2010. As a result, patients will need to dig deeper into their pockets to fund healthcare.
You may also be interested in...
Partisan Politics Returns To US FDA Congressional Oversight
The US FDA has stood out as an agency that tends to draw broad bipartisan support amid a generally rancorous and divided Congress. A House hearing, however, may be a sign that those days are over.
GLP-1 Coverage Restrictions In Medicare Part D Surge As Demand For Obesity Drugs Grows
A major shift from unfettered coverage to prior authorizations was recorded by MMIT over the past year for the leading GLP-1/GIP agonist diabetes drugs. Public interest in using the drugs off label for weight loss drove the change.
Roche Gets Adjuvant ALK+ Lung Cancer To Itself With Alecensa Approval
The US FDA cleared Roche’s supplemental approval request for ALK inhibitor Alecensa in ALK-positive non-small cell lung cancer following tumor resection.