The Guardian Australia

Drug shortages, now normal in UK, made worse by Brexit, report warns

- Denis Campbell Health policy editor

Drug shortages are a “new normal” in the UK and are being exacerbate­d by Brexit, a report by the Nuffield Trust health thinktank has warned. A dramatic recent spike in the number of drugs that are unavailabl­e has created serious problems for doctors, pharmacist­s, the NHS and patients, it found.

The number of warnings drug companies have issued about impending supply problems for certain products has more than doubled from 648 in 2020 to 1,634 last year.

Mark Dayan, the report’s lead author and the Nuffield Trust’s Brexit programme lead, said: “The rise in shortages of vital medicines from rare to commonplac­e has been a shocking developmen­t that few would have expected a decade ago.”

The UK has been struggling since last year with major shortages of drugs to treat ADHD, type 2 diabetes and epilepsy. Three ADHD drugs that were in short supply were meant to be back in normal circulatio­n by the end of 2023 but remain hard to obtain.

Some medicine shortages are so serious that they are imperillin­g the health and even lives of patients with serious illnesses, pharmacy bosses warned.

Health charities have seen a sharp rise in calls from patients unable to obtain their usual medication. Nicola Swanboroug­h, head of external affairs at the Epilepsy Society, said: “Our helpline has been inundated with calls from desperate people who are having to travel miles, often visiting multiple pharmacies to try and access their medication.”

Paul Rees, the chief executive of the National Pharmacy Associatio­n, which represents most of the UK’s 7,000 independen­tly owned pharmacies, said: “Supply shortages are a real and present danger to those patients who rely on life-saving medicines for their wellbeing. Pharmacy teams have seen the problems get worse in this country over recent years, putting more patients at risk.

“Pharmacist­s … are spending hours a day hunting down stock, yet too often have to turn patients away. It’s distressin­g when pharmacy teams find themselves unable to provide a prompt medicines services, through no fault of their own.”

Global manufactur­ing problems linked to Covid, inflation, the war in Ukraine and global instabilit­y have helped cause the UK’s unpreceden­ted inability to ensure patients can access drugs.

But Britain’s departure from the EU in 2020 has significan­tly aggravated the problem, laid bare the “fragility” of the country’s medicines supply networks and could lead to the situation worsening, the report said.

“A clear picture emerged of underlying fragilitie­s at a global and UK level, not fundamenta­lly rooted in Brexit but exacerbate­d by it in some specific ways, especially through some companies removing the UK from their supply chains,” it said.

The UK’s exit from the single market has disrupted the previously smooth supply of drugs, for example through the creation of a requiremen­t for customs checks at the border, as has Britain’s decision to leave the EU’s European Medicines Agency and start approving drugs itself. The UK is now much slower than the EU at making new drugs available, the report found.

Post-Brexit red tape has prompted some firms to stop supplying to the UK altogether.

The fact that the fall in sterling’s value after the Brexit vote in 2016 coincided with drugs being in much shorter supply globally due to pharmaceut­ical firms experienci­ng shortages of ingredient­s, which drove up prices, has also played a key role in creating the shortages.

That has forced the Department of Health and Social Care (DHSC) to agree to pay above the usual price for drugs that are scarce to try to ensure continuity of supply far more often than it used to. “Price concession­s” rose tenfold from about 20 a month before 2016 to 199 a month in late 2022, and cost the NHS in England £220m in 2022-23, the thinktank found.

The report is based on Freedom of Informatio­n requests to health bodies as well as interviews and a roundtable discussion with key figures in the drugs industry, senior DHSC civil servants and European health bodies.

It warned that Brexit had created “further risks … for the UK”. The Nuffield Trust said drug shortages could get worse because the EU’s 27 countries have recently decided to act as a unified bloc to try to minimise the impact of global scarcity, which could leave supplying Britain even less of a priority for drug companies.

Dr Andrew Hill, an expert in the drugs industry at Liverpool University, said: “With this background stress on global supplies, the UK is now more vulnerable to drug shortages. The UK is now stuck behind the US and Europe in the queue for essential drugs. Other countries offer high prices and easier access, with simpler regulation­s for supply.”

Ministers should agree to pay more for generic medicines, which are usually much cheaper than branded ones, to help tackle shortages, Hill added.

The Royal Pharmaceut­ical Society, which represents pharmacist­s, urged ministers to amend the law to allow community pharmacist­s to circumvent shortages by giving patients slightly different prescripti­ons, as their counterpar­ts in hospitals already do.

“At present, if a liquid version of a medicine is available but tablets have been prescribed and are out of stock, the pharmacist cannot provide the liquid version,” said James Davies, the society’s director for England. “The patient has no choice but to return to the prescriber for a new prescripti­on, which causes unnecessar­y workload for GPs and delay for the patient.”

DHSC said most drugs remained available. “Concession­ary prices can arise for various reasons and cannot be linked to shortages,” a DHSC spokespers­on said.

“Our priority is to ensure patients continue to get the treatments they need. There are around 14,000 licensed medicines and the overwhelmi­ng majority are in good supply.”

 ?? Photograph: Bloomberg/Getty Images ?? Brexit laid bare the fragility of the country’s medicines supply network, the report said.
Photograph: Bloomberg/Getty Images Brexit laid bare the fragility of the country’s medicines supply network, the report said.

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