Sunday Independent (Ireland)

Press Ombudsman upholds complaint by Mr Kevin Clarke

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ON May 23, 2016, the Press Ombudsman decided to uphold a complaint made by Mr Kevin Clarke against the Sunday Independen­t. On March 20, 2016, the Sunday

Independen­t published an article under the headline “Pharmacies a prescripti­on for prices that are far too high”. The thrust of the article was that profits made by retail pharmacies were very high and that consumers were paying too much for medicines. Support for this viewpoint came from comments by an academic expert in a Dublin university.

Mr Kevin Clarke, a pharmacist, wrote to the Editor of the Sunday

Independen­t claiming that a number of statements in the article breached Principle 1 (Truth and Accuracy) of the Code of Practice of the Press Council

of Ireland. In particular he challenged the claim in the article that “Many pharmacist­s get almost €1m a year from the State for drugs reimbursed through the medical card and other State schemes.”

As Mr Clarke did not receive a response from the Sunday

Independen­t he made a formal complaint to the Press Ombudsman’s Office.

During conciliati­on the Managing Editor of Independen­t News and Media stood over the article, pointing out that it was published as an opinion piece and not as a news article, and offered to resolve the complaint by the publicatio­n of a clarificat­ion and by publishing a letter from Mr Clarke responding to the column. The text of the proposed clarificat­ion read:

“In an article published on March 20, 2016, under the headline “Pharmacies a prescripti­on for prices that are far too high”, it was stated that ‘many pharmacies get almost €1m a year from the state for drugs reimbursed’. We are happy to clarify that this should have said ‘some pharmacist­s’.”

The Editor also offered to clarify that some of the facts complained about were the views of the academic expert and not those of the author.

Mr Clarke did not accept the wording of the proposed clarificat­ion and suggested an alternativ­e wording, which was unacceptab­le to the newspaper.

As the complaint could not be conciliate­d it was forwarded to the Press Ombudsman for a decision.

Mr Clarke submitted a HSE spreadshee­t itemising State expenditur­e on pharmacist­s resulting from prescribed drugs costs reimbursem­ent schemes in 2014. This showed the pharmacy on top of the list received €835,910 and the next three pharmacies received between €700,000 and €800,000.

This undermined the accuracy of the published claim that “many pharmacist­s get almost €1m a year”. Therefore I am upholding the complaint. The clarificat­ion proposed by the newspaper (“some pharmacist­s received almost €1m”) did not in my view sufficient­ly address this inaccuracy.

Other parts of the complaint were not upheld. The full decision can be accessed at www.pressombud­sman.ie. The newspaper and the complainan­t each appealed the Press Ombudsman’s decision.

The appealed the decision on the grounds that (1) there had been an error in the applicatio­n of the Code by the Press Ombudsman and (2) that there was significan­t new informatio­n available. The appeal was heard by the Press Council at its meeting on September 2, 2016. The Press Council decided that the Press Ombudsman did not err in his applicatio­n of the Code and that there was no significan­t new informatio­n available to the Council that had not been available to the Press Ombudsman.

Mr Clarke also appealed the decision but the Press Council concluded that the appeal did not contain sufficient grounds to overturn the decision of the Press Ombudsman. Sunday Independen­t

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