Skip to main content
Netherlands News in English

Main navigation

  • Top stories
  • Health
  • Crime
  • Politics
  • Business
  • Tech
  • Culture
  • Sports
  • Weird
  • 1-1-2
Image
Pills
Pills - Credit: Photo: motorolka/DepositPhotos
Health
new medicine
VIG
waiting time
Ministry of Public Health Welfare and Sports
Gerard Schouw
Thursday, 2 September 2021 - 15:10

Share this article:

Patients in NL wait 1.5 years for access to new medicines

Patients in the Netherlands have to wait an average of 510 days for access to a new medicine, even if it has already been approved, the association for innovative medicines VIG said based on a study by agency BS Health into 14 new medicines in the period 2018 to 2020. The average waiting time of about a year and a half is much longer than in the countries around us.

The waiting time in the Netherlands doubled in the past four years, according to VIG. "In a country like Germany, with approximately the same level of prosperity and medicine prices, this happens much faster: within 30 days. It is inexplicable that people in the border region, who live barely 20 kilometers away from each other, have unequal chances of recovery," said VIG director Gerard Schouw. According to his organization, these "usually" involve medicines against serious diseases, including cancer.

The longer waiting times are due to "dragging" price negotiations between the Minister and drug companies, the VIG explained. "In Germany, prices are also heavily negotiated, but there almost all new medicines are available within thirty days."

A hundred days should be enough to arrive at an acceptable price, said the VIG, because "that is managed in the countries around us". The VIG is launching a campaign called #backto100. This autumn, the association will talk to politicians, patient organizations and Dutch healthcare authority NZa. It also wants to come up with proposals to speed up the process to availability for the patient and is getting inspiration for this from abroad.

In the period 2014 to 2016, patients in the Netherlands waited an average of 315 days for accessibility to 11 new medicines.

Reporting by ANP and NL Times

More like this

Image
Reception zone at a hospital
Waiting times of a year or longer at some Dutch hospitals as doctor shortage grows
Image
Artificial insemination
Majority of MP's support independent investigation into fertility clinics, mass donors
Image
The m/v Hondius cruise ship enters the Rotterdram port after a six-week hantavirus outbreak led to at least three deaths and a dozen confirmed infections. 18 May 2026
All Hondius crew members in Rotterdam test negative for hantavirus
Image
Artificial insemination
Fertility clinic failed to inform hundreds of parents about 36 “mass” sperm donors
Make NL Times your top Google source

Follow us:

Latest stories

  • Electric shock critically injures Amsterdam student on school trip to Germany
  • Dutch gov’t against national age limit on social media; Prefers EU regulation
  • Burger King pushing Amsterdam meat advert ban with veggie lookalike grilled patty
  • Teen arrested in Amsterdam in probe into series of March explosions, synagogue attacks
  • Dutch doctors file complaint against Philip Morris over misleading ad campaign

Top stories

  • Drents Museum heist: Men sentenced to 47 months in prison for theft of Dacian treasures
  • Too many single family homes for too few families; Vacancy, depreciation looms: ABN Amro
  • Employees of porn site Motherless upload child sex abuse videos themselves
  • Dutch gov't will only allow European company to operate DigiD platform
  • Video: Suspected tornado whips through village near Enschede, damaging homes

© 2012-2026, NL Times, All rights reserved.

Footer menu

  • Change Privacy Settings
  • Privacy Policy
  • Contact
  • Partner Content