The 'Dispatched' Podcast

<p>BioPharmaDispatch - discussing the issues impacting the Australian biopharmaceutical and life sciences sectors with Paul Cross and Felicity McNeill.</p>

The 'Dispatched' Week in Review Podcast - 12 December

Not for the first time, some Australian politicians are in trouble over their use of very generous travel entitlements. We discuss why it matters for patients and why the claim that they are acting within the rules does not stack up.

12-12
44:41

The 'Dispatched' Week in Review'- 5 December

A turbulent round of Senate Estimates, highlighted by a heartbreaking exchange about a mother with two children battling Crohn’s disease. Officials suggested that the family seek compassionate access from companies or seek treatment at a public hospital. We also canvass ‘MFN’ pricing risks, FOI controversies, ministerial travel blowouts and looming budget pressures that do not operate according to what might be a common understanding.

12-05
53:11

The 'Dispatched' Podcast - 30 November

In this week’s Dispatched Podcast, we unpack the AI Health Summit and agree it revealed a gap between institutional caution and the real-world pace of its adoption. The practical reality of the proposed ban on genetic testing for life insurance, the self-limiting nature of Australia’s health reform processes, the status quo bias, and the absence of any genuine patient-centred purpose in current settings. We also discuss productivity, a critical roundtable, access inequities and the opportunit...

11-30
01:02:57

The 'Dispatched' Week in Review - 31 October

Reform efforts can struggle because they focus on health systems at their strongest point rather than their weakest. Framing is a pernicious tool used to justify delays and denials. We argue that the uptake of GLP-1 therapies in the US is delivering remarkable results, and that we need to apply the lessons from that experience in Australia, challenging institutional narratives and reframing the public debate to focus on public health benefits.

10-31
45:51

The 'Dispatched' Week in Review'- 17 October

We discuss what could be a significant policy shift in PBS decision-making, with clinical judgement backed by what is a 'common sense' outcome. It could be a new precedent, but only if all stakeholders demand clarity on the criteria so that it can be applied more broadly. We also reflect on patient advocacy in New Zealand, where access has become a political issue and the focus of a significant discussion at this week's Valuing Life Summit in Wellington.

10-17
39:26

The 'Dispatched' Week in Review - 12 October

Has Senate Estimates devolved into an overly polite, time-sliced format that enables waffle, obfuscation, and endless questions taken on notice? Does this reflect weakened scrutiny? The responses provided revealed the truth of review processes, which aim to protect institutional power, blame outsiders for problems, and generally add complexity to existing problems. Few appear willing to say the quiet part out loud. Listen on Apple or Spotify.

10-12
55:31

The Dispatched 'Week in Review' - 3 October

We open by marking Yom Kippur and a frank discussion before pivoting to the US 'MFN' drug-pricing moves, what they could mean for Australia’s PBS, and why institutional rigidity in HTA persists and is worsening. Medical research funding rhetoric versus slow progress in PBS and health technology access, hospital funding and NDIS pressures, and the expansion of pharmacist prescribing, as well as the need for subsidised pharmacy services.

10-03
53:01

The 'Dispatched' Week in Review - 26 September

On the Dispatched Podcast this week, we reflect on the erosion of public confidence in health decision-making. Former Victorian Chief Health Officer Brett Sutton’s admission that some COVID-19 measures were not strictly evidence-based highlights the need for a Royal Commission, which would have compelled accountability and helped restore trust. The discussion then turns to MSAC’s rejection of newborn screening for Pompe disease. Health Minister Mark Butler must intervene, not least because he...

09-26
52:25

The 'Dispatched' Week in Review Podcast - 15 August

An update on the Government's travel policy! The opportunity of AI, our own journeys, and why it needs to be embraced and not feared, particularly in healthcare. Productivity and the impact of chronic conditions and another example of why it would be better to target support to those most in need.

08-15
35:53

The 'Dispatched' Week in Review Podcast - 8 August

Government travel policies make us laugh and laugh. Understanding reforms from the government's perspective is critical to understand how they will evolve over time, and an update that raises more questions than it answers.

08-08
35:25

The 'Dispatched' Podcast

A special episode focused on the AbbVie-commissioned survey, revealing firm support for increased investment in medicines and the true extent of patients paying the cost of their prescriptions. What does it mean and what is the opportunity?

08-03
22:37

The 'Dispatched' Week in Review Podcast - 1 August

Another order on pharmaceutical pricing, but what does it mean? What does the Government's productivity roundtable have in common with the HTA Review? Screening programs that aren't, and a co-payment reduction that puts the safety net further out of reach.

08-01
42:17

The Dispatched 'Week in Review' Podcast - 27 July

A sense of entitlement that needs to be questioned, Australia is on the list of nine countries to be targeted over pharmaceutical pricing, and the hopeless hypocrisy of allowing a group of disreputable regimes to have a say on this country's response to a pandemic, while fulminating about the US on the PBS.

07-27
31:25

The 'Dispatched' Week in Review Podcast - 17 July

The opportunity for Australia is to do less deflecting on healthcare affordability and engage in an honest discussion about the genuine challenges confronting many Australians. The debate does not just deflect on affordability.

07-17
50:02

The 'Dispatched' Week in Review Podcast - 10 July

The ongoing debate regarding the US, the Trump administration's potential tariffs on pharmaceuticals and the PBS is mainly characterised by falsehoods and errors. We discuss our incredible frustration over a debate that is almost entirely disconnected from facts, including the apparent belief that Australia has a vast array of advanced pharmaceutical manufacturing facilities. We also have praise for the Prime Minister following his statements at a media conference today.

07-10
37:11

The Dispatched 'Week in Review' Podcast - 4 July

We have more health commissioners, including for genomics, and we both hope for a more meaningful discussion on weight loss therapies, the opportunities, access barriers, and their system-changing impact. Telehealth is here to stay, particularly in specific therapeutic areas, while one state has introduced political donations reform that could have a broader impact.

07-04
01:00:53

The Dispatched 'Week in Review' Podcast - 27 June

The health department has released its incoming ministerial brief to the reappointed Mark Butler, revealing internal government discussions over the future funding of new PBS listings, and hinting at limiting the implementation of the HTA Review recommendations to a small number of technologies. It also contradicts the claim that new PBS listings take 466 days from TGA registration, suggesting that it actually takes almost 650 days.

06-27
48:41

The 'Dispatched' Podcast - 6 June

Adding disability to health in an already full ministerial bandwidth and funding challenges. Trade policy and the PBS, and a presentation on the human consequences of our decision-making. Can a targeted diagnostic screening and the strangest patient case study? Times 0:00 - 9.45: Adding disability to health in an already full ministerial bandwidth and funding challenges 9.45 - 17:55: Trade policy, the PBS, and managing the risks and opportunities 17:55 - 17:55: About a presentation on the hum...

06-06
44:52

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