Marketwatch: viagra: a success story for rationing?
A possible blueprint for coverage of other new, much-promoted drugs.
ABSTRACT: The 1998 launch of Viagra prompted widespread fears about the budgetary
consequences for insurers and governments, all the more so since Viagra was only the first
of a new wave of so-called lifestyle drugs. The fears have turned out to be greatly exagger-
ated. This paper analyzes the rationing strategies adopted in four countries (United States,
Britain, Germany, and Sweden), relates them to the characteristics of different types of
health care systems, and identifies the conditions necessary for successful cost contain-
ment. The case of Viagra, it concludes, holds out two general lessons: first, allow excep-
tions to total bans on reimbursement; second, involve the medical profession in the deci-
Thelaunchofviagrain1998,with Theseworrieswereallthemoreacutebe-
cause Viagra was, if not the first, certainly the
highest-profile example of a new generation of
drugs—so-called lifestyle drugs—that raised
makers worldwide. Here was a new drug for
these kinds of issues. If consumers could de-
the treatment of erectile dysfunction (ED),
fine their own medical necessity—for, say,
which threatened the budgets of health care
drugs to reduce their weight—then, it was ar-
systems and insurers. Initial estimates of the
gued, the floodgates of drug spending would
likely cost of making Viagra’s cost reimburs-
open, with dire consequences for the finances
able tended to be alarmingly and, in retro-
of insurers and health care systems if they
spect, excessively high. In part, this reflected
chose to reimburse such prescriptions. Viagra
uncertainty about the prevalence of the con-
dition: Estimates of the number of males suf-
opened up a wider debate. If the distinction
fering from ED in the United States ranged
between drugs prescribed by doctors to deal
from twenty million to thirty million, de-
with medical necessities and those demanded
pending on the definition.1 More fundamen-
by consumers to enhance their lifestyles was
tally, it was difficult to draw a clear line be-
often blurred—since the same drugs could
tween prescribing Viagra to treat a defined
serve either purpose—then how could their
medical condition or to enhance normal sex-
use be controlled or rationed?2 And how, in any
ual performance, a difficulty compounded by
case, should medical necessity be defined, and by
the fact that ED is a self-reported condition
and that the notion of normal sexual perfor-
These questions cut across health care sys-
tems. The case of Viagra therefore offers an op-
Rudolf Klein is visiting professor at the London School of Hygiene and the London School of Economics. HeidrunSturm is a health care researcher at the Department of Clinical Pharmacology of the University of Groningen, theNetherlands.
H E A L T H A F F A I R S ~ Vo l u m e 2 1 , N u m b e r 62002 Project HOPE–The People-to-People Health Foundation, Inc.
portunity to compare how various countries
treatment of ED is only one consideration—
reacted to the same specific, concrete chal-
and not the most important one—when con-
lenge: whether or not to make Viagra a reim-
sidering the economics of making it a reim-
bursable drug by including it in the standard
bursable drug. Much more important are the
benefit package. In what follows, we analyze
assumptions made about the likely increase in
the policy responses—that is, rationing strate-
the demand for treatment of ED that is likely
gies—adopted in a variety of countries, draw-
to follow such a decision. For policymakers ev-
ing on the material publicly available either in
erywhere the crucial consideration was how
print or on the Web, supplemented by some
best to avoid an upsurge in the total volume of
telephone interviews. Our aim in this is, first,
demand. Fourth, although in theory Viagra is a
to draw out a taxonomy of rationing strategies
prescription-only drug, in practice it can be
and, second, to relate those strategies to the
obtained quite easily over the Web.6 Whatever
characteristics of national health care systems.
reimbursement policies are adopted, it is
Accordingly, we have been selective rather
therefore in effect an over-the-counter (or,
than comprehensive in our choice of countries;
strictly speaking, over-the-Web) drug, largely
we chose them to provide a sufficiently wide
outside the control of the medical profession.
range of policy responses and types of healthcare systems. In all cases, we report on the im-
mediate reaction to the introduction of Viagra
and subsequent adaptations. This field is still
In this section we set out the various strate-
evolving, however, so some of our information
gies for rationing Viagra adopted in the coun-
may have been overtaken by events since the
tries we studied. However, before doing so, we
completion of this study at the end of 2001.
need to put the specific case of Viagra into the
wider context of health care rationing more
icy responses, however, it is worth noting
generally, to see whether it conforms to a stan-
some of the relevant background information
dard pattern or has any special features.7
about Viagra available to decisionmakers.
First, it is an effective form of treatment for ED.
sions to deliver less than the optimum amount
Soon after the launch of the drug, twenty-one
of effective health care as a result of setting pri-
randomized controlled trials concluded that
orities among competing demands on the sys-
about 75–80 percent of men show a statisti-
tem—pervades across all health care systems,
cally significant improvement after taking
regardless of spending levels. It takes many
Viagra.3 This eliminated the option of arguing
forms, of which the explicit denial of a service
that Viagra is an ineffective drug. Second, al-
is the most dramatic but not necessarily the
though ED is associated with a variety of dis-
most important. Other forms of rationing are
eases (and consequential surgical or pharma-
exclusion (sections of the population not cov-
ceutical interventions), the most important
ered), dilution (fewer tests ordered, fewer
correlation is with age. So the condition is not
nurses on the ward), deterrence (making access
one that is self-inflicted—that is, the result of
to care difficult), and delay (waiting lists). But
personal behavior. It cannot therefore be
not only do the forms of rationing differ. So, too,
blamed on the patient. Third, the evidence
does the decision-making mode involved.
suggests that Viagra is cost-effective when
compared with other forms of treatment for
trally or diffused among the professional ser-
ED.4 Attempts to push the analysis further and
vice deliverers. Similarly, they can be made ei-
calculate costs per quality-adjusted life year
ther explicitly (setting out the criteria for
(QALY) gained run into methodological prob-
allocating resources to individual patients) or
lems, and any results must be treated with cau-
implicitly (fixing global budgets that force
tion.5 In any case, the relative cost-effective-
ness or cost-utility of using Viagra for the
sources at the point of delivery). Generally
N o v e m b e r / D e c e m b e r 2 0 0 2
speaking, diffused and implicit rationing by
modes, if only at the edges. However, they pro-
cross-nationally, a strategy that diffuses not
vide a useful analytic framework for analyzing
only responsibility but also blame. Presenting
decisions about whom to treat and in what
way as reflecting professional judgments and
comparative health policy studies, the United
scientific evidence, rather than budgetary lim-
States emerges as an outlier, unique unto itself.
itations, is clearly in the interests of politicians
and insurance managers. It also may be a ratio-
Viagra. Absent a national decision, even U.S.
nal approach, given uncertainty about which
federal programs adopted divergent positions.
The Department of Veterans Affairs (VA) re-
sifying conditions has meant that the menu of
program automatically included Viagra for the
services tends to be elastic), but also attempts
treatment of ED following its approval by the
to exclude specific interventions immediately
Food and Drug Administration (FDA), as re-
raise the objection that almost every procedure
quired by legislation, although the agency
or drug can be medically necessary for some-
feared clinical and financial abuse.11 Of course,
one. Even cosmetic surgery, a standard item in
the financial implications of this were rela-
most exclusion lists, may be crucial for some-
tively modest compared with those faced by
one contemplating a future career as a ballet
the VA health system, given that only about 10
dancer, for example. So explicit exclusion poli-
percent of Medicaid beneficiaries are adult
cies quickly develop holes as exceptions are al-
males. In any case, the decision was variously
lowed, as the case of Viagra illustrates.
implemented by the states. Some resisted out-
In many respects, the case of Viagra follows
right (among them, New York, Wisconsin, and
Nevada).12 Others followed the recommenda-
drug was first launched worldwide, the over-
whelming, although not entirely unanimous,
Medicaid Services (CMS) designed to mini-
response of decisionmakers was to exclude it
from the reimbursable health care menu. Sub-
scribed: from four pills per month (for exam-
sequently, however, policies have been modi-
ple, in Alabama and Florida) to ten (in Utah).13
fied to accommodate arguments of medical ne-
cessity. Total bans in practice turned out to be
larly mixed picture. A very few plans included
leaking colanders. However, it was mainly at
Viagra in their formulary from the start; one
this stage that differences in rationing modes
such was Tufts, which put it in its highest
emerged between countries. For the sake of
copayment category.14 The great majority re-
simplicity, we present these differences as four
sisted. “Simply put, having sexual relations is
models derived from the experience of specific
not a medical necessity,” one Aetna official ar-
countries. These, we must stress, are very
gued to the New York Department of Insur-
much “ideal-type models”; that is, in practice
ance. However, under the challenge of both
H E A L T H A F F A I R S ~ Vo l u m e 2 1 , N u m b e r 6
court rulings and state regulators, many of the
or multiple sclerosis) and when ED causes de-
insurers were forced to abandon or modify the
pression and psychosocial problems. In one
blanket exclusion of Viagra.15 Overall, then, the
case, the court sought to draw a distinction—
consequence is that access to reimbursable
central to the debate about lifestyle drugs—
Viagra prescriptions for American men—the
between using Viagra to enhance potency and
conditions under which it is prescribed, the
prescribing it for the restitution of normal
number of pills deemed appropriate, and the
bodily function. Only in the latter case, the
level of copayments—depends on where they
court determined, should Viagra be reimburs-
live and with whom they are insured. In this
able (although normal may not be simple to
respect, of course, Viagra does not represent so
define). “Intact erectile function is part of the
much a deviant case as an illustration of the
image of a healthy man, including the elderly,”
health care system could not be more different
have not been generalized into any kind of ap-
from that of the United States, there is one
plicable guidelines. Rationing in Germany
shared characteristic: The courts have played a
continues to take the form of scattergun jurid-
major role in shaping decisions. Germany’s sys-
ical decisions. Indeed, muddling through is in
tem is based on social insurance—that is, a
the interests of the insurers; if the Federal So-
cial Court were to generalize the generosity of
corporatist style of governance. Within the
the lower courts, the result would be much
broad framework set by the federal govern-
more expenditure. For the time being, the
ment, policy decisions are negotiated by the
original ruling of the Bundesausschuss there-
representatives of the medical profession and
fore determines the policy of insurers—that is,
the sickness funds—the Bundesausschuss der
no reimbursement, absent a specific court de-
Ärzte und Krankenkassen. It was this body
cision. For the longer term, it is worth noting
that decided that Viagra should not be in-
that sickness funds and physicians share a
cluded in the standard package of reimburs-
common interest in limiting demands on their
able drugs. However, the decision was ap-
collective drug budgets: If individual physi-
pealed. The Federal Social Court decided that
cians are overly generous in prescribing Viagra
the Bundesausschuss did not have the consti-
or any other lifestyle drugs, they not only limit
tutional right to issue an unconditional ban on
the resources available to their colleagues but
any drug.16 This left matters in limbo, and the
can be held personally responsible for the cost.
court has yet to give a more detailed ruling
Whether this shared interest in self-restraint
about the specific issues raised by the case of
will survive if the government implements its
Viagra and other “lifestyle” drugs. At first ea-
decision to remove the cap on the drug budget
ger to secure such a ruling, the insurers have
stopped pressing for a decision, fearing that
n Centralization–politicization. In con-
the Federal Social Court would take its cue
trast to both the United States and Germany,
from the lower courts, which have consistently
policy in Britain for rationing Viagra in the Na-
ruled in favor of patients appealing against re-
tional Health Service (NHS) was centrally de-
termined by government ministers. Given the
In a series of cases, the lower courts have
highly centralized nature of the NHS, this
decided in favor of reimbursing the cost of
might at first appear to be a highly predictable
Viagra prescriptions wholly or partially.
outcome—an illustration of path dependency.
Among successful arguments have been that
In fact, this would be a misleading conclusion.
patients should be reimbursed when ED is the
The paradox of the NHS is that rationing has
consequence of medical intervention or condi-
always been implicit. Traditionally, ministers
tion (for example, a bladder cancer operation,
have set budgets but have allowed the medical
dialysis and kidney transplantation, diabetes,
profession to translate financial constraints
N o v e m b e r / D e c e m b e r 2 0 0 2
into clinical decisions—a highly effective
ling demands. The creation of Primary Care
blame-diffusion strategy.19 The oddity of the
Trusts, with responsibility for purchasing
decision about Viagra was thus that it repre-
health care for given populations, has given
sented not so much the logic of the NHS as a
them responsibility for controlling their own
It was a reluctant departure. The first in-
stinct of ministers was to depoliticize the issue
esting, because exceptional, case of a policy re-
by asking for expert advice.20 But the Govern-
versal. Although in many respects a first
ment’s Standing Medical Advisory Committee
cousin to Britain’s NHS—inasmuch as it is
refused to oblige. It concluded that there was
funded through taxes—Sweden’s health care
no medical reason for refusing to make Viagra
system is a far more decentralized one. County
available by prescription in the NHS—“in
councils are responsible for running health
common with many treatments available un-
care services and, since January 1998, for phar-
der the NHS this improves quality of life, but
maceutical budgets. However, decisions about
does not save or prolong it”—but that it was
drugs remain firmly national. As in Britain,
for ministers to make the final decision in light
policy is driven by the assumption that the
of the “availability of resources.” The decision
same package of health care services should be
of the secretary of state for health was that
available regardless of where people live. The
since “impotence is in itself neither life threat-
result has been tension between the budget
ening, nor does it cause physical pain,” and
holders (the county councils) and the central
since Viagra threatened to increase the cost of
decisionmakers. At the time of Viagra’s launch
treating impotence tenfold, general practitio-
on the market, the rule was that any pharma-
ners (GPs) would be restricted in their ability
ceutical product accepted as a prescription
to issue NHS prescriptions for Viagra. Avail-
drug in Sweden automatically had to be in-
ability would be limited to groups of men
cluded in the drug benefit package. Accord-
whose disabilities were linked to specific
medical conditions: for example, those treated
However, conscious of the financial impli-
for prostate cancer or kidney failure and those
cations of automatically endorsing all new
suffering from Parkinson’s disease and multi-
products and under pressure from the county
ple sclerosis (MS). The official ration, further-
more, was to be one tablet a week. Exceptional
quently appointed a commission of inquiry. Its
cases not falling into the official categories
report, published in 2000, recommended that
would be referred to hospital specialists.
drugs be divided into two categories.23 The
The logic of this decision was far from self-
first, involving treatment for disease and in-
evident, as the leader of Britain’s GPs was
jury, would continue to be part of the standard
quick to point out: Its only justification ap-
package. The second, which included not only
peared to be that it promised to constrain de-
Viagra but also drugs for the treatment of obe-
mand and spending.21 Also, in apparently lim-
sity, smoking cessation, and hair loss, would be
iting the NHS’s treatment responsibilities to
available only in exceptional circumstances.
dealing with conditions that either threatened
Detailed criteria were to be defined by a gov-
life or caused physical pain, the secretary of
ernmental committee, whose report was over-
state appeared to be expounding a new re-
due at the time of this writing, to replace pres-
strictive, unsustainable doctrine. However,
subsequent correspondence in the British Medi-
At present, decisions are made case by case
cal Journal suggested general support among
by the Ministry of Health, in consultation with
doctors for rationing Viagra: “Nobody needs
an erection at public expense” was the heading
Läkemedelsverket, which is the regulatory
of one letter.22 Furthermore, British GPs have a
agency for medical products. In effect, there is
shared interest with government in control-
bureaucratic rationing. Applications have to
H E A L T H A F F A I R S ~ Vo l u m e 2 1 , N u m b e r 6
be made by the individual patients concerned,
matter. It is far from clear that the expertise of
with support from their doctors. In making the
agencies such as NICE carries legitimacy in
determinations, the criterion appears to be dif-
determining this much larger question.
ferent from that used in Britain (and othercountries). The emphasis is on the conse-
quences of ED, not the cause or associated
morbidities. Treatment is sanctioned in those
exceptional cases where ED aggravates an ex-
the menu of rationing strategies outlined in
isting condition. In practice, this means psy-
the previous section? Or are their options con-
chiatric conditions. The system appears to
tingent on the characteristics of specific health
have been effective in containing demand and
care systems? In the case of the four countries
expenditure. By the end of 2001 there had been
roughly 3,000 applications, of which fewer
matched with different rationing strategies.
than 10 percent had been approved.24 Given
But if we are to draw any general conclusions
the low success rate, it is perhaps not surpris-
from this finding, we have to test it by asking
ing that the number of applications has been
whether similar systems yield similar rationing
diminishing over time. A further deterrent may
well be the lack of privacy: Under the Swedish
The United States and Britain are, in their
system of open government, applications are
contrasting ways, unique systems. No other
country is as chaotic as the former or as cen-
tralized as the latter. But Sweden and Ger-
emergent fifth model of rationing, relevant to
many exemplify larger classes of systems. Swe-
the introduction of lifestyle drugs more gener-
den is an example of the “Nordic model” of
ally, that overlaps with those already discussed
health care: universal, tax-funded, but decen-
but is worth noting. This is rationing by exper-
tralized. Germany is an example of a social
tise. Since 1999 Britain has had the National
insurance–based system—with a plurality of
Institute for Clinical Evidence (NICE), an
insurers and providers and with a corporatist
agency charged with reviewing the evidence
style of governance. In both there is a group of
about new health technologies and producing
similar countries. Accordingly, we compare
guidelines about their use in the NHS. Had
the rationing strategies of other countries
NICE been in existence in 1998, ministers
within each group. In this exercise we adopt a
“black swan” approach.26 If it turns out that
Viagra to it with a profound sense of relief.
each group is consistent in adopting the same
And, as noted above in the case of Sweden, bu-
strategies, then there is a strong case for as-
reaucratic rationing is seen as a temporary ex-
suming that system characteristics influence
pedient until effective guidelines can be de-
(and perhaps determine) rationing strategies.
vised. In both instances, the hope is that
If there is a deviant case (or black swan)
rationing decisions can be depoliticized by in-
within a group, however, any relationship
voking the expertise of a neutral, authoritative
agency or committee. The experience of NICE
so far suggests that this may be an overly opti-
started as a deviant case when it automatically
mistic view.25 Many of NICE’s decisions have
included Viagra in the standard benefit pack-
age but has since moved closer to practice in
modified following lobbying by the pharma-
other Scandinavian countries. Finland has a
ceutical industry or consumer groups repre-
three-tier system of refunding drug costs, with
senting patients with specific diseases. Al-
varying criteria and copayments.27 In the top
though it is relatively easy to determine which
category, refunds are automatic. In the bottom
interventions are effective, deciding on priori-
category, “significant and expensive” drugs are
ties within constrained budgets is a different
reimbursed only if there are “sufficient thera-
N o v e m b e r / D e c e m b e r 2 0 0 2
peutic indications.” Decisions about the classi-
those of Austria and the Netherlands. Many
fication of new drugs are made by the Council
other countries have health care systems based
of State, which also sets out the conditions un-
on the social insurance principle (France, for
der which prescriptions may be eligible for a
example), but only Austria and the Nether-
refund. Viagra, like certain drugs to treat MS
lands share Germany’s corporatist model of
and obesity, falls into the bottom category. It
governance. The similarities in the style of
can be reimbursed only if ED is caused by “se-
health care governance between Germany and
rious disease,” such as total prostatectomy or
Austria are particularly striking.29 It is the in-
vertebral trauma. Unlike in Sweden, psycho-
surers (Versicherungsträger), not the govern-
logical indications are not included. Patients
ment, in both countries that determine the
have to apply for reimbursement to the Social
basket of reimbursable drugs. And in the case
imbursement of Viagra strictly, a policy intro-
vened. This may be because of a difference in
duced to avoid the cost explosion that took
political culture, or, more plausibly, because
place in Sweden before its change of policy. Pa-
the Austrian insurers were more flexible than
tients have to apply for reimbursement to a na-
their German counterparts were. Instead of
tional insurance scheme, where officials then
imposing a total ban on Viagra reimburse-
ment, they allowed some exceptions from the
start, thus making their policies more accept-
In the case of the Nordic countries, there is
able and a legal challenge less likely. So Austria
therefore no “black swan.” However, some
is the most “pure” example of corporatist ra-
swans have gray feathers. While there may be
tioning—that is, government delegating the
convergence on the bureaucratic model of ra-
tioning Viagra, there are variations in both cri-
The Netherlands, however, provides a black
teria and procedures. Moreover, it cannot nec-
swan. Here the minister of health decided to
exclude Viagra from the standard package.30
reflects only the shared characteristics of the
Following the standard Dutch practice of car-
health care systems. Two other, more general
rying out medical and economic evaluations,
explanations could account for this phenome-
the insurers’ College voor Zorgverzekeringen
non. The first is policy learning. The Scandina-
had recommended that Viagra should be reim-
vian countries may have learned from each
bursed for the usual medical conditions and in
other’s experience (a point that applies
strictly limited doses.31 However, the minister
strongly to Sweden and Norway). The second
of health, Else Borst, overruled the recommen-
is that convergence may have nothing to do
dation. As in Britain, this was a political deci-
with the characteristics of the health care sys-
sion—not, as in Germany and Austria, the
tems but may reflect a shared Nordic political
product of a corporatist-style consensus-
engineering exercise involving insurers and
the medical profession. So, in this group, there
have only two cases to compare with Germany,
appears to be a deviant case. However, it may
H E A L T H A F F A I R S ~ Vo l u m e 2 1 , N u m b e r 6
be a deviant case not because it is a black swan
tinction between medically necessary and life-
but because it should never have been put into
style interventions is, as has been forcefully
this group in the first place. The Netherlands
argued, largely arbitrary.33 If the aim of medi-
has always presented difficulties to political
cine is to improve the quality of life—to allow
taxonomists, and its labeling as a corporatist
mum potential—then it is not self-evident
Overall, then, the relationship between sys-
that improving sexual performance is any dif-
tems’ characteristics and modes of rationing
ferent from improving the ability to carry out
remains an open question. Some policy deci-
the activities of daily living. And in the latter
sions are indeed preempted by systems charac-
case, it is accepted that medicine will inter-
teristics: A central government decision of the
vene, often expensively, as in the repair or re-
kind found in Britain and the Netherlands is
placement of joints. If, further, psychological
unimaginable in the United States. But beyond
distress is put on a par with physical pain—as
that, our evidence shows that the relationship
in practice it is—then the dividing line be-
between system characteristics and rationing
tween medically necessary and lifestyle inter-
strategies is not direct—and that if there is a
ventions becomes further blurred. For exam-
relationship at all, it is a complex one, medi-
ple, should psychotherapy be put into the
lifestyle category? The problem is compoundedwhen we consider drugs or procedures that en-
hance people’s ability to conform to the social
n International norm. So far our analysis
norms of their society, ranging from having chil-
has concentrated on analyzing differences in
dren (in vitro fertilization) or not having them
both the rationing strategies adopted and the
(contraception) to having bodies of an accept-
characteristics of health care systems. But this
able shape and appearance (cosmetic surgery,
is to risk overlooking something far more im-
treatment for obesity). In short, the lifestyle cat-
portant: that all of the health care systems ana-
egory turns out to be an overelastic hold-all. It
lyzed have succeeded, in their various ways, in
covers a heterogeneous lot of drugs and inter-
rigorously rationing the availability of Viagra
ventions whose inclusion in the standard bene-
as part of the standard package of reimburs-
fit package can be argued on grounds of pro-
able or free health care. Contrary to what
moting normal physical, psychological, or social
might have been expected from the general ex-
functioning and for which notions of what is
perience of rationing reviewed above, govern-
normal may well be contestable, vary over time,
ments or insurers have decided explicitly ei-
ther to exclude Viagra from the basic benefit
package or to make its availability contingent
amid all this heterogeneity: that necessity is
on specific medical conditions. This conclu-
defined not by the doctor but by the consumer,
sion would hold if our analysis were extended
not according to technical medical criteria but
to cover other advanced, postindustrial coun-
in light of social and cultural norms. Needs are
tries, such as Italy and Switzerland. Successful
rationing is the international norm, thus mak-
pejorative definition of lifestyle drugs or inter-
ing nonsense of apocalyptic speculations that
ventions might therefore be those for which
the patient rather than the doctor not only di-
n Arbitrary distinctions? Is Viagra a one-
agnoses the condition but can also demand a
off case of successful rationing, or does it point
specific remedy. It is in this respect that Viagra
to more general conclusions? How far is Viagra
can be seen as representative of a wider class.
representative of the wider class of lifestyle
To return to the starting point of this paper,
drugs and interventions? In answering these
the reason why the launch of Viagra prompted
questions, the difficulty is that the whole con-
so much alarm among policymakers was pre-
cept of lifestyle drugs is problematic. The dis-
cisely that need appeared to be determined
N o v e m b e r / D e c e m b e r 2 0 0 2
subjectively, bypassing the filter of medical ne-
cessity. The spectre of moral hazard haunted
has another feature that, while not unique to
abuse—and the consequent cost explosion—
it, serves to distinguish it. As already noted, it
be prevented if a drug for a self-reported con-
can be bought relatively easily and cheaply on
dition were made reimbursable? To the degree
the open market despite being classified as a
that other drugs or interventions raise the
prescription drug. If exit into the market is rel-
same question, and however different they
atively cheap, if over-the-Web drugs are avail-
may be in other respects, the story of Viagra
able, then it is unlikely that much voice will be
raised in protest against rationing by price or
that there will be serious worries about equity.
streets carrying protest banners. Impotence is
performance, from call girls to rhinoceros
more likely to be suffered in private than pa-
horns. No new inequity is therefore involved.
raded in public. Further, there is no concen-
trated constituency to campaign for a more
other new drugs or interventions (whether or
generous policy. In contrast to homogeneous,
not labeled “lifestyle”) share some or all of
organized pressure groups acting for patients
these characteristics, so policy outcomes are
with conditions such as MS, those suffering
likely to mirror the story of Viagra. If the pa-
from ED are a scattered, heterogeneous lot
tient group involved is heterogeneous and un-
without any organizational base. This limits
organized, if there is little public sympathy for
the scope for a campaign designed to apply po-
the specific condition involved, if demands can
litical pressure on governments and insurers.
be met in the market place, then policymakers
should be able to adopt rigorously restrictive
likely to enlist much public sympathy. Argu-
policies without much difficulty. The con-
verse, of course, also follows: If there is an orga-
jokes than indignation. Insofar as ED is corre-
nized constituency, if public sympathy can be
lated with age, it is often seen as somehow
evoked, and if heavy expense is involved, then
“natural” and inevitable. Private grief in such
policymakers are likely to encounter strong re-
cases is not seen as calling for collective ac-
sistance when trying to restrict reimburse-
tion—an argument that, however, is not ap-
ment for new drugs or interventions (whether
plied to other degenerative conditions of old
or not labeled “lifestyle”). However, our analy-
age for which treatment is automatically in-
sis also suggests two more general conclu-
cluded in the basic package of health care ben-
sions, less contingent on the specific character
efits everywhere. Overall, there is a wide-
spread view that treatment of ED should rank
low in any system of priorities. As a leading
rationing strategies of different countries: All
British political commentator put it: “A nation
of the systems in our sample have allowed ex-
which spends taxpayers’ money on better
ceptions from a general ban on refunding, al-
erections, while leaving old ladies to soil them-
though some have done so only after regula-
selves and starve in under-staffed wards, is
tory or judicial rulings (as in Germany).
H E A L T H A F F A I R S ~ Vo l u m e 2 1 , N u m b e r 6
Furthermore, the exceptions tend to follow acommon pattern: Except in Sweden, reim-
bursement of Viagra is contingent on previous
medical conditions or interventions. If there is
politically feasible, the case history suggests
any ethical logic in this, it appears to be a com-
that the same set of rationing strategies can
group are perceived to deserve special treat-
ment as victims of unmerited, disproportion-
conditions seem necessary. First, rationing is
ate misfortune. However, the real logic is
an instance where the leaky bucket may be
surely economic and political. On the one
preferable to a water-tight one: Factoring in
hand, the criteria represent a sorting mecha-
exceptions, based on some reasonably objec-
nism that is both reasonably objective and fi-
tive criteria, helps to make rationing strategy
nancially restrictive, distinguishing between
acceptable. Second, the acquiescence of the
need that can be defined by the medical pro-
medical profession is essential, and including
fession and by patients’ demands. The formula
the profession in the design of rationing strat-
provides a tool for the exclusion of pure life-
egies is one way of achieving this. If these con-
style drugs—that is, those where the patient
ditions are met, the new generation of drugs
both diagnoses the condition and can demand
a specific remedy. On the other hand, the strat-egy leaves scope for medical discretion by leav-
This study was funded by the Milbank Memorial Fund.
ing some judgments to doctors. It is therefore
The dividends of the support given were long in coming,
more respectful of medical autonomy than an
and the authors’ thanks go to Dan Fox for his patience.
outright ban would be. While an outright banchallenges the medical profession to devise
ways of gaming the system, allowing excep-
A.E. Benet and A. Melman, “The Epidemiology of
tions invites the cooperation of the profession,
Erectile Dysfunction,” Urology Clinics of North
particularly if doctors have been involved in
America (November 1995): 699–709.
2. A. Keith, “The Economics of Viagra,” Health Affairs
have, by and large, obtained at least the passive
3. A. Burls et al., “Sildenafil,” Report no. 12 (Depart-
support of the medical profession. There have
ment of Public Health and Epidemiology, Uni-versity of Birmingham, September 1998).
been criticisms of the criteria adopted but no
4. E.A. Stolk et al., “Cost Utility Analysis of
sustained campaign of opposition. Further,
doctors working in health care systems with
Phentolamine Injections,” British Medical Journal
capped budgets, as in Britain and Germany as
well as in some U.S. managed care plans, have
5. N. Freemantle, “Valuing the Effects of Sildenafil
an interest in restraining demand. To the ex-
in Erectile Dysfunction” (Editorial), British Medi-cal Journal (29 April 2000): 1156–1157.
norm, so governments may find the medical
6. A Lycos search for “Penispill” on 12 June 1998
profession a powerful ally in resisting any kind
produced seven Web sites on how to get pre-scriptions or how to order Viagra via phone or on
of open-ended commitment to lifestyle drugs
as they come onto the market. Indeed, such
7. R. Klein, S. Redmayne, and P. Day, Managing Scar-
drugs can be seen as representing as much of a
city (Buckingham: Open University Press, 1996).
threat to the medical profession as to budgets,
8. D. Mechanic, “Muddling through Elegantly:
to the extent that they undermine physicians’
Finding the Proper Balance in Rationing,” Health
monopoly of judgment about what is medically
Affairs (Sep/Oct 1997): 83–92.
necessary—and, more generally, raise doubts as
9. On Oregon, see J. Oberlander, T. Marmor, and L.
to what that hallowed phrase actually means.
Jacobs, “Rationing Medical Care: Rhetoric andReality in the Oregon Health Plan,” Canadian Med-ical Association Journal (29 May 2000): 1583–1587.
N o v e m b e r / D e c e m b e r 2 0 0 2
For another example, see D. Chinitz et al., “Is-
Medical Journal (24 February 2001): 489–491. For a
rael’s Basic Basket of Health Services: The Impor-
neutral survey of NICE’s work, see J. Raftery,
tance of Being Explicitly Implicit,” in The Global
“NICE: Faster Access to Modern Treatments?
Challenge of Health Care Rationing, ed. A. Coulter and
Analysis of Guidance on Health Technologies,”
C. Ham (Buckingham: Open University Press,
British Medical Journal (1 December 2001):
10. Department of Veterans Affairs, “VA Reaches De-
26. K. Popper, The Logic of Scientific Discovery (London:
cision on Viagra,” Press Release (in Mealey’s Impo-
Hutchinson, 1959). However many white swans
tency Drug Watch, 23 July 1998).
we count, Popper argues, we cannot with cer-
11. Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services,
tainty say that all swans are white. But if we see
Drug Policy: Medicaid Coverage of Viagra, www.hcfa.
one black swan, we can confidently say that “not
gov/medicaid/drpolicy.htm (5 January 2000).
12. “Managed Care Monitor—Viagra: Two HMOs,
27. Rajaniemi Rajaniemi, Institute for Social Insur-
Two States Say ‘No’ to Coverage,” American Health
ance, SII, Helsinki, personal communication, 31
13. “USA Today: States Draw Line for Viagra”
28. For Denmark, Karen Kolenda, Department of
Mealey’s Impotency Drug Watch (20 August 1998).
Drug Economics, Danish Medicines Agency, per-sonal communication, 1 February 2002. For Nor-
14. Tufts Health Plan, “Pharmacy Information,”
way, John Anderson, Health Ministry, Oslo, per-
w w w.t u f t s - h e a l t h p l a n .c o m / m e m b e r s /
sonal communication, 4 February 2002.
pharmacy-3tier.html (19 October 1999).
29. Anna Buscics, Hauptverband der Sozial-
15. “Viagra Coverage,” Mealey’s Insurance Law Weekly (1
versicherungsträger, personal communication,
16. “BSG-Urteil zur erektilen Dysfunktion,”
30. E.A. Stolk, W.B.F. Brouwer, and J.J.V. Deutsches Ärzteblatt, 15 October 1999, C-1895.
Busschbach, “Vergoeding van Viagra stuit op
17. “Erneut Novellierung der Arzneimittel-
waarden en normen” [Reimbursement of Viagra
richtlinien?” (Revised supplemental medical di-
is based on values and norms], Medisch Contact (28
rective), Ärztezeitung, 9 November 2001).
18. Court decision Az: S2 KR 485/99.
31. College voor Zorgverzekeringen (CvZ) Doc. no.
19. H.J. Aaron and W.B. Schwartz, The Painful Prescrip-tion (Washington: Brookings Institution, 1984).
wachtkamermiddel Sildenafil (Original letter
20. S. Dewar, “Viagra,” in Health Care UK, 1999/2000,
from the CvZ to the minister of health).
ed. J. Appleby and A. Harrison (London: King’s
32. G.H. Okma, Studies on Dutch Health Politics, Policies,and Law (Utrecht: Medical Faculty of the Univer-
21. J. Chisholm, “Viagra: A Botched Test Case for Ra-
tioning,” British Medical Journal (30 January 1999):
33. See Keith, “The Economics of Viagra.” Keith is
former director of economic policy analysis at
22. “Rationing of Sildenafil” (Letters), British MedicalJournal (12 June 1999): 1620–1621.
34. A. Marr, “Viagra: A Hard Choice,” Observer, 24
23. Staten offentlich utredening (SOU) 2000:86, del
3 (2000) (Report of Swedish Investigation Com-mittee); and Vanja Gavellin, Socialdeparte-mentet, personal communication, 3 December2001.
24. Lotta Eriksson, Socialdepartementet, and Jane
Ahlquist-Rastat, Läkemedelsverket/MPA, per-sonal communication, 3 December 2001; andLäkemedelsverket, “Aktuellt/Observanda,” 6 De-cember 2001, www.mpa.se/observanda/obs01/dispens_hokostnadsskydd.shtml (6 August2002).
25. For a searing attack on NICE, see R. Smith, “The
Failings of NICE,” British Medical Journal (2 De-cember 2000): 1363–1364. For the reply by thechairman of NICE and comments from a varietyof sources, see the letters column of the British
H E A L T H A F F A I R S ~ Vo l u m e 2 1 , N u m b e r 6
WARNING! When trying to withdraw from many psychiatric drugs, patients can develop serious and even life-threatening emotional and physical reactions. In short, it is dangerous not only to start taking psychiatric drugs but also can be hazardous to stop taking them. Therefore, withdrawal from psychiatric drugs should be done under clinical supervision. Principles of drug w