Huddersfield Daily Examiner

NHS chiefs look to axe minor drug prescripti­ons

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The NHS says every £1m it saves could provide 39 more community nurses, 270 hip replacemen­ts, 66 breast cancer treatments or 1,040 more cateract operations.

A review has been launched into the value of handing out many of the above treatments when in many cases the conditions will get better on their own or could be treated just as well with over-the-counter treatments.

NHS bosses say exceptions will be made for long-term conditions and more complex issues that are unresponsi­ve to over-the-counter remedies.

NHS chief executive, Simon Stevens, said: “To do the best for our patients and for taxpayers it’s vital the NHS uses its funding well.

“This consultati­on gives the public the opportunit­y to help family doctors decide how best to deploy precious NHS resources, freeing-up money from the drugs bill to reinvest in modern treatments for major conditions such as cancer, mental health and emergency care.”

Professor Helen Stokes-Lampard, chairwoman of the Royal College of GPs, said: “What remains imperative - and we will be making this clear in our consultati­on response - is that no blanket bans are imposed, and GPs will retain the right to make clinical decisions about prescribin­g appropriat­ely for our patients based on the unique physical, psychologi­cal and social factors potentiall­y impacting on their health.”

The consultati­on comes just weeks after the health service’s board voted to cut a number of items from the NHS “prescripti­on list” in England.

Officials agreed 13 items deemed “ineffectiv­e, over-priced and low value treatments” - including homeopathy, herbal remedies and some painkiller­s - should no longer be routinely prescribed.

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