Yorkshire Post

Cost ‘puts patients off their medicine’

- DAVID BEHRENS COUNTY CORRESPOND­ENT

ONE IN three people with longterm conditions such as asthma and arthritis have not picked up their medicines because of the cost of their prescripti­ons, according to research out today.

A poll of 4,200 people who pay for medicines also found that nearly a third sometimes skip or reduce their recommende­d doses.

Of these, 43 per cent cite the cost of their prescripti­on as a reason for doing so, and nearly twothirds say skipping doses has had a negative impact on their health.

A third of those who have missed or reduced their dose have needed extra medical treatment as a result.

Prescripti­ons are free in Scotland, Wales and Northern Ireland – but in England most patients are charged £8.60 for each item. A pre-payment certificat­e costs £29.10 for three months or £104 for a year.

The new poll was carried out for the Prescripti­on Charges Coalition of more than 40 health charities, which campaigns to abolish prescripti­on charges for those with long-term conditions.

Laura Cockram, head of policy and campaignin­g at Parkinson’s UK, said the charges were costing the NHS more in the long term.

She said: “We’ve heard distressin­g and alarming experience­s from people who are facing impossible choices over whether they should eat, heat their home or pay for essential medication­s to treat life-threatenin­g conditions.

“It’s a travesty that prescripti­on charges are preventing people from getting the treatment they need. This situation is dangerous and goes against the very principle of our NHS.”

Figures from the coalition suggest the costs of people not being able to afford their medication are likely to be far greater than the estimated £360m to £430m that free prescripti­ons for working-age people with long-term conditions would cost.

A Department of Health spokesman said: “We have made sure that people with long-term conditions can get access to affordable prescripti­ons.”

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