Campaigners threaten legal action over UK-US deal on prices NHS pays for drugs
Campaign groups Global Justice Now and Just Treatment are threatening legal action against the UK government over a drug pricing deal with the US. They claim a change allowing ministers to override the National Institute for Health and Care Excellence (Nice) on drug prices amounts to an "unlawful power grab." This change, part of a medicines agreement with the Trump administration, could lead to the NHS paying higher prices for drugs.

Briefing Summary
AI-generatedCampaign groups Global Justice Now and Just Treatment are threatening legal action against the UK government over a drug pricing deal with the US. They claim a change allowing ministers to override the National Institute for Health and Care Excellence (Nice) on drug prices amounts to an "unlawful power grab." This change, part of a medicines agreement with the Trump administration, could lead to the NHS paying higher prices for drugs. The campaign groups have warned the Department of Health and Social Care (DHSC) they will seek a judicial review unless the government revokes the secondary legislation that enables ministers to overrule Nice. The DHSC maintains Nice's independence will be protected and that the deal will benefit patients by increasing access to innovative medicines.
Article analysis
Model · rule-basedKey claims
5 extractedThe deal is part of the government's medicines agreement with the Trump administration announced last December.
A change to drug approval processes could allow the health secretary to override NICE's judgment on drug prices.
Campaigners are threatening legal action against the UK-US drug pricing deal unless a key element is scrapped.
Ministers claim the deal will mean more NHS patients get access to innovative medicines and ensure UK drug exports to the US remain tariff-free.
The statutory instrument giving ministers power to overrule NICE is unlawful because it clashes with the Health and Social Care Act 2012.