New Straits Times

BREXIT BODES ILL FOR UK HEALTHCARE

Exit from EU may result in delays for medicine and healthcare supplies, says British MP

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BRITAIN’S looming exit from the European Union carries real risks that medicines and healthcare supplies will be delayed, the United Kingdom’s public spending watchdog said yesterday, and an influentia­l lawmaker said a no-deal Brexit may have the “gravest of consequenc­es”.

While Prime Minister Boris Johnson’s government has taken some steps to manage the risks, the National Audit Office (NAO) said in a report that there was still significan­t work to be done.

Lawmaker Meg Hillier, who chairs Parliament’s public accounts committee, said the report was “deeply concerning”.

The Health Ministry “still doesn’t know whether all stockpiles are in place”, she said, has no idea whether social care providers such as nursing homes for the sick and elderly are ready, and is not sure whether freight capacity needed for medical imports will be in place on time.

“If (the) government gets this wrong, it could have the gravest of consequenc­es,” Hillier said in a statement about the NAO report. She added that as head of the public accounts committee, she’d already seen “countless examples of deadlines missed and government failing”.

Johnson has vowed to take Britain out of the EU with or without a deal by Oct 31 — increasing the chance of a sudden departure that will bring trade tariffs and customs checks with the continent for the first time in decades.

The risk is acute for health and social care services, as well as for the pharmaceut­ical industry with 37 million packs of medicines imported into Britain from Europe every month.

The government’s own reasonable worst-case view is that the flow of goods across the channel Europe could be reduced anywhere between 40 and 60 per cent of normal levels on day one after Brexit.

The Department for Health & Social Care has asked medical suppliers to build up stockpiles of medicines and has found extra warehouse capacity for them.

A six-week stockpile of equipment such as gloves, syringes and other medical supplies is 88 per cent complete, the NAO said, but informatio­n on other stockpiles is “incomplete”.

The Department for Transport last week shortliste­d eight companies that could bid to bring in drugs. The contracts would provide capacity equivalent to thousands of trucks per week.

The audit report, however, said that time was short and warned that not all that freight capacity might be available on Oct 31.

The NAO report comes after drugmakers and public health experts also issued warnings about disruption to healthcare and medical services if Britain exits the EU.

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