July/August 2021 • PharmaTimes Magazine • 14-15
// THOUGHT LEADERSHIP //
By Emma Sutcliffe, SVP, Patient Insights and Solutions, Prime Patient
Figure 1
From bold ambition to practical infrastructures
In 2012, health tech journalist, Kisch, predicted that “patient engagement is the next blockbuster drug”. A bold ambition. When Laura McKeaveney, Global Head of Patient Engagement, left Novartis at the end of 2020, she stated “patient centricity has a ‘transferable business value’ for a company”. Novartis has become the benchmark for excellent patient engagement practices with publication of measurable parameters that represent the ‘return on investment’ for a company infrastructure when patient engagement practices are approached as a business necessity and not just a ‘nice to’ concept.
The potential for patient engagement to become a therapy, a commodity and a catalyst to improve all aspects of pharma business and product development from that clarion call is coming to fruition. Laura and the team at Novartis recognised that getting patient engagement right – from the inside out – and creating a transferable business value from patient engagement was key to making sure that a patient-centric organisational mindset works – and pays. Payment is in the form of the ‘triple win’ – approaches, products, services and enduring policies that deliver benefits for patients, for pharma and for society.
Figure 2
Patient centricity is not an overnight success
Despite the intensity of patient-centricity projects and the plethora of branded patient engagement programmes run by pharma, we are still struggling to justify investment in approaching patient engagement as a strategic business essential for a company. The milestones of patient engagement are given in Figure 1, behind which are inputs from broader societal change and expectations from patient and advocacy groups which started more than three decades ago with the first ‘patient centric ward 4b’ opening for people being treated in 1984 for HIV infection.
There are parallels for patients living with rare conditions today to those early struggles and patient lobbying groups for people living with HIV. Both patient groups share the determination to be ‘heard’ within pharma – to disrupt, contribute to and challenge clinical trial protocols – to do whatever needs to be done to get new medicines to patients as soon as possible.
As such, it is evident that patient engagement impacts on every ‘department’ within pharma walls and the outcomes of patient engagement practices internally provide huge societal impact. Patient engagement therefore, must be strategically driven and recognised as requiring end-to-end practices from patient-focused drug development through to long-term patient support programmes.
Given that bottomless funding pockets do not exist and that pharma is increasingly scrutinised for the financial relationships it has with Patient Advocacy Groups, it is crucial that, internally and externally, a company has a transparent standard operating and reporting procedure for all investment in patient engagement activities. The return on investment must be demonstrated from all patient engagement projects.
Again, there is nothing sinister in this reporting when it is approached from the ‘triple win’ perspective. Figure 2 summarises the current academic ‘proof’ that this triple win is achievable – and acceptable to our different healthcare regulators and society itself.
Figure 3
Proof that patient engagement secures the ‘triple win’
Within a pharma company, the importance of, and needs for, patient engagement differs according to the department (Figure 3.). This serves to demonstrate that an overall patient-centric approach for an organisation is essential.
The pivotal ‘relationship vignettes’ that require a strategic approach to patient engagement are as follows:
Figure 4
Global reach; local decisions
Accepting the need for a patient-centric organisational psyche and the impact on the business is one thing; implementing change and adjusting to the practicalities across huge organisations is perhaps the bigger challenge. Expert patient engagement agencies have a part to play in this transformation in three distinct ways:
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