I referred to some of the challenges. In particular, I mentioned the expensive drugs for rare diseases, and I probably should have said drugs for rare diseases, because frankly, the challenge around drugs for rare diseases doesn't entirely relate to their cost; it relates equally to the methodologies that are used for the assessment and evaluation of drugs that require data. The data sets for rarer diseases are based on smaller populations, and therefore there are challenges around methodologies, and I mentioned that in my presentation.
This is an area that the national pharmaceutical strategy task group is looking at, and the likelihood is that a different specialized approached should be taken for drugs for rare diseases, based on that, irrespective of the cost. Data sets are different, and we need to look at that.
However, what has happened to date, of course, is that the 13 owners and operators on common drug review agreed, in the establishment of the program, that all new drugs would go through the common drug review. There is not a bypass at this point in the system. The members of the common drug review agreed that all new drugs would go through common drug review before a reimbursement decision. Therefore, that is what happens currently.
This is a challenge, and therefore, as we move along with the national pharmaceutical strategy, looking at some of these challenges, we may see changes in the future.