Biopharma companies are hunkering down as the COVID-19 epidemic breaks out worldwide.
In a FiercePharma survey of biopharma
companies late last month, most drugmakers said they were simply
limiting travel to hard-hit countries such as China, South Korea and
Italy. Now, as more cases pop up across the U.S., Europe and Asia, their
tone has shifted.
GlaxoSmithKline has “instructed all employees
to postpone non-critical international business travel until further
notice,” a spokesman said. Bristol Myers Squibb started restricting on
business travel and put the kibosh on workplace and company meetings
until the end of March. And BMS’ limits don’t just apply to employees
and contractors, but to partners, suppliers and vendors, too, a
spokeswoman said.
Boehringer Ingelheim, for its part, is
restricting travel throughout Europe, where the case count has picked up
in the last several days. The German drugmaker has also put China, Hong
Kong, Macau, Taiwan, southeast Asia, South Korea, Japan and Iran
off-limits.
“We expect employees to reschedule
business meetings that require traveling or organize them virtually in
those areas,” a spokesperson said, adding that the restrictions aren’t
entirely new. They’re a more detailed version of a previous policy
limiting travel in affected areas.
Swiss drug giant Roche is asking
employees to “postpone all travel to China, including Hong Kong and
Macau, until further notice,” and “limit business travel to and from
Korea, Japan, Singapore, Iran and Italy to the absolute
business-critical activity only.” Any employee returning from one of
those areas must work from home for at least 14 days upon their return,
Roche says.
Amgen is suspending international business travel until March 21 and strengthening cleaning routines and visitor screening at all of its locations.
Last week, the drugmakers who responded
to FiercePharma’s inquiries mostly said they are monitoring the
situation and restricting travel to and from China. GSK also restricted
travel to Italy and South Korea at the time.
In a new statement, Sanofi said it’s
requesting employees and contractors to avoid travel in China, Hong
Kong, Macau, South Korea, Iran and seven regions in Italy. They’re asked
to “keep all the travels to business essential only,” with some
exceptions, such as to return home. Sanofi has created an “internal
crisis committee” and still prohibits travel to Wuhan and throughout
China’s Hubei province.
Mylan is limiting international travel and prohibiting travel to and from China, Hong Kong, Iran, Italy, Japan and South Korea.
“We are asking that all business travel is minimized and alternatives
to travel and in-person meetings are considered,” a spokeswoman said.
The travel restrictions and limitations
are designed to help contain the novel coronavirus, which has spread to
85 countries, infecting about 100,000 people worldwide. The virus has
caused more than 3,300 deaths.
Among those infected are three Biogen
employees—two from Europe and one from outside of Massachusetts—who
traveled to a management meeting in Boston last week. At the meeting,
several attendees had flu-like symptoms, according to a company
statement. Several tested positive for flu, while three have confirmed
COVID-19 infections.
In response, Biogen has instructed all of the
meeting attendees to work from home for at least two weeks and is
restricting employee travel through the end of March. Aside from those
who attended the meeting, any employee should stay home if they don’t
feel well and contact healthcare providers as necessary, Biogen says.
Biogen isn’t alone. Seattle-area employees for Amazon and Microsoft have tested positive for COVID-19, as has a contractor for Facebook. Tech companies in Seattle are asking employees to work from home, and some have shut down certain offices.
Amid the threat, two prominent cancer
centers—the Dana-Farber Cancer Institute and MD Anderson—are restricting
business travel. And the Healthcare Information and Management Systems
Society canceled its annual conference in Orlando for the first time in
more than 50 years. Prominent medical conferences say they are
monitoring the situation, but haven’t made a decision to cancel.
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