Brief
A Covid-19 Action Plan for Pharma Executives
A Covid-19 Action Plan for Pharma Executives
Here’s how pharma companies can keep medicines flowing as they race to develop a vaccine.
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Brief
Here’s how pharma companies can keep medicines flowing as they race to develop a vaccine.
While the human cost and economic disruptions of the global pandemic have created shock waves, the mission of the pharma industry to maintain a steady supply of vital medicines and deliver new innovation has provided a powerful focus for leadership teams. Other sectors may be more threatened, but the business challenges facing pharma are urgent, like ensuring that supply chains are functioning so patients can get needed prescriptions filled and remain on critical therapies. With much at stake, pharma executives are moving decisively to ensure patient health, manage disruptions and lead the development of a vaccine, antiviral or other therapeutic solution for Covid-19.
Below we examine the near-term implications of Covid-19 on the industry and offer an action plan to help companies operate safely and effectively in the midst of the crisis, support healthcare professionals and patients, and sustain long-term innovation portfolios.
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Leadership teams face disrupted supply chains, delayed clinical trials and lack of access to physicians and other medical forums. In the coming months, patients may be increasingly unwilling or unable to visit physicians for new diagnoses or prescriptions or refills. Companies that are overly dependent on single suppliers are at higher risk of supply-chain disruption.
The Covid-19 crisis also will have knock-on effects for the broader pharma environment, including reduced funding for early-stage biotech companies and diminished demand for contract research organizations. Pharma companies will delay some product launches, and those that go ahead may fall short of expectations, given the impediments to commercializing drugs at the same speed and scale in the current environment. Once the public health crisis is over and business operations return to normal, pharma executives will need to adjust go-to-market strategies for previously planned product launches.
Importantly, the underlying economic crisis triggered by the Covid-19 pandemic will have a significant ripple effect on state and national budgets. Urgent and costly measures to shore up businesses and support individuals will force governments to contain outlays in every category, including healthcare. The incremental innovation required for premium-price drugs will continue to rise, as will pricing pressure on commodity products such as generics and biosimilars.
Most pharma companies don’t face a crisis, but key actions can help address new challenges:
The Covid-19 crisis poses special risks for some pharma companies. The following situations may require executives to take substantial actions to reduce costs and preserve cash:
As leadership teams know full well, the pharma industry is on the front lines of a battle to contain a global pandemic. Setting the right priorities today can help companies accelerate innovation while ensuring a steady supply of urgently needed drugs for patients directly and indirectly affected by Covid-19.
The global Covid-19 pandemic has extracted a terrible human toll and spurred sweeping changes in the world economy. Across industries, executives have begun reassessing their strategies and repositioning their companies to thrive now and in the world beyond coronavirus.
Loïc Plantevin leads Bain & Company’s Healthcare practice in Europe, the Middle East and Africa and is based in the firm’s Paris office. Jason Evers is a partner with Bain’s Healthcare practice and is located in the Chicago office. George Eliades is a partner with Bain’s Healthcare practice and is based in San Francisco.
The authors wish to thank Tim van Biesen, leader of Bain’s Global Healthcare practice, and Joshua Weisbrod, leader of Bain’s Healthcare practice in the Americas, for their contributions to this article.