• In 1995, Tamil Nadu pioneered the centralised procurement and distribution of drugs and medicines to government hospitals across the State. This helped in buying drugs at a far cheaper rate due to the sheer volume of drugs procured.
  • For the first time, a private entity — the National Cancer Grid — has been able to replicate the model and hammer down the cost of high-value, high-volume cancer and supportive care medicines through a pilot pooled procurement programme. The pooled procurement of 40 drugs by 23 cancer centres resulted in savings of Rs. 13.2 billion.
  • The drastic reduction in drug cost can in turn greatly decrease the out-of-pocket adherence to treatment even in private hospitals, and increased access and affordability by patients at small cancer centres in smaller cities.