“…Maes et al propose two possible solutions to comply with the ESA: the payer pays for the service of the treatment delivering long-term health outcomes or the payer pays for data services as a delivered data package per year instead of paying for a single treatment administration (Maes et al, 2019). Furthermore, healthcare systems wishing to implement spread payments may face national legal barriers which may require adjustment of country-specific regulations (Carlson et al, 2009;Carlson et al, 2011;Espin et al, 2011;Ferrario and Kanavos, 2013;Tuna et al, 2014;Kleinke and McGee, 2015;Barlas, 2016b;Proach et al, 2016;Montazerhodjat et al, 2016;Kanavos et al, 2017;Nazareth et al, 2017;NEHI, 2017;PWC Health Research Institute, 2017;Spark et al, 2017;Goncalves et al, 2018;Salzman et al, 2018;Infante et al, 2019;Lorente et al, 2019;Mahendraratnam et al, 2019). For instance, the current legislation in Spain only allows long-term spending for certain investments which excludes medicines and Sweden does not allow payments for more than three years for non-investment consumables (that are not purchased to deliver financial return) (Alliance for Regenerative Medicine, 2019).…”