Mainland China’s 17 million Alzheimer’s patients can, for the first time, pay less out of pocket for a costly drug touted as “historic” and “the beginning of the end” for the memory-robbing disease after Beijing launched a commercial insurance innovative drug list in an effort to make medicines more accessible and affordable.
Leqembi, developed by Japan’s Eisai and costing a mainland Chinese patient about US$28,400 a year, could see its price cut by half after it was added to the inaugural...
China’s new drug insurance: lifeline for patients or squeeze on big pharmaceutical firms?
Published 7 hours ago
Source: scmp.com

Related Articles from scmp.com
7 minutes ago
Hong Kong Bar chief urges critics to review Jimmy Lai verdict before judging
11 minutes ago
South Korean court rules Yoon’s martial law illegal as walls close in
42 minutes ago
Homicide investigation launched after MIT professor fatally shot at home
58 minutes ago
Hongkongers to change trains at Hung Hom during 2-day Tuen Ma line works in 2026
1 hour ago
How Chinese scientists turn annoying allergy cells into a powerful weapon against cancer
1 hour ago