The Guardian Australia

Scrapping free prescripti­ons for over-60s ‘could have devastatin­g impact’

- Lucy Campbell

Scrapping free prescripti­on charges for people over 60 and raising the qualifying age to 66 could have a devastatin­g impact on the health of tens of thousands of older people, new analysis by Age UK suggests.

In a joint open letter urging the government to reconsider proposals to scrap free prescripti­ons for over-60s in England, 20 healthcare organisati­ons expressed “deep shared concerns” that the move would leave many patients unable to afford medication, intensifyi­ng existing health inequaliti­es and having a devastatin­g impact on some older people’s health.

A Department of Health and Social Care (DHSC) consultati­on on proposals to raise the qualifying age for free NHS prescripti­ons in England from 60 to 66, in line with the state pension age, will close on Thursday after generating more than 32,000 responses.

Signatorie­s of the letter, including Age UK, the Royal College of GPs (RCGP), and the Royal Pharmaceut­ical Society (RPS), warn the proposals would be likely to “have a lasting adverse affect on the half (52%) of 60to 64-year-olds with one or more long term conditions”, hitting those who are poorly and on low incomes the hardest.

The Office for National Statistics estimates there are more than 3.7 million 60- to 65-year-olds in the UK. The letter highlights that, by the DHSC’s own impact analysis, two-thirds – 66% – would be rendered ineligible for free prescripti­ons, and 15% wouldn’t fully adhere to taking their prescribed medicine as a result.

Caroline Abrahams, the charity’s director, warned some would be patients reluctant to act on symptoms or get a diagnosis, for fear of being unable to afford long-term, symptom-relieving or, in some cases, life-saving medication.

Prof Martin Marshall, RCGP’s chair of council, said introducin­g an additional cost for over-60s managing long-term health conditions would “disproport­ionately affect a large group of patients who are on low incomes but just above the threshold for financial help with the costs of their medication”.

Patients who are less financiall­y well-off would be discourage­d from managing their health proactivel­y, Marshall said, and could mean they only present to their GP when their problems are far worse. This is compounded by the long wait for treatment many patients have already experience­d because of the challenges of the last 18 months, he added.

While the DHSC estimates the proposals could add up to £300m to the NHS budget by 2027, the letter warns this figure represents “a tiny fraction of the NHS £212.1bn budget for 2020/21” and fails to take into account the impact on local health services. “The money the government raises if it goes ahead with this proposal will be easily outweighed by the additional costs to the NHS if, as is predictabl­e, some people fail to take their medication and become sicker, more quickly,” Abrahams said. “Tens of thousands may require hospital treatment due to rationing what they take.”

Thorrun Govind, chair of the RPS English pharmacy board, said the proposal amounted to a “tax on the sick at exactly the time [in their lives] at which they may be needing more medicines” and called for prescripti­on charges in England to be scrapped for all age groups, as is the case in Scotland and Wales.

A DHSC spokespers­on said: “90% of community prescripti­ons in England are free of charge, and people don’t pay if they are on a low income, over 60, or have certain medical conditions.

“The upper age exemption has not changed since 1995 and that is why we are consulting on restoring the link between this and the state pension age. No final decisions have been made and we will publish the consultati­on response in due course.”

 ?? Photograph: Alamy ?? The letter warned that some older people may not fully adhere to taking their prescribed medicine as a result of the move.
Photograph: Alamy The letter warned that some older people may not fully adhere to taking their prescribed medicine as a result of the move.

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