Daily Mail

CRISIS AT CHEMISTS

Pharmacies ‘barely coping’ as dozens of popular medicines run short ++ Hundreds of thousands of patients affected

- By Eleanor Hayward Health Reporter

PHARMACIST­S have warned of shortages for every major type of medicine – including painkiller­s, contracept­ives and diabetes pills.

A poll of community pharmacist­s yesterday revealed the dramatic extent of the drugs crisis that is hitting hundreds of thousands of patients in the UK.

In addition to widespread shortages of hormone replacemen­t therapy (HRT), which have been highlighte­d by the Daily Mail, chemists are also struggling to get hold of common painkiller­s and blood pressure pills.

Pharmacist­s said they are living ‘on a knife- edge’ due to the mass shortages, which are caused by a perfect storm of manufactur­ing problems.

Dr Farah Jameel, a GP from the British Medical Associatio­n, called for ‘ urgent action’ and said the shortages were ‘gradually getting worse’.

Some 84 per cent of the 402 pharmacy workers surveyed by the Chemist + Druggist website said they have experience­d shortages of HRT in the past six months. Two thirds (67 per cent) said they have been hit by shortages of contracept­ive pills and more than half (52 per cent) said they had run out of pain killing creams at some point. More than a fifth (22 per cent) said they had faced diabetes drugs’ shortages.

Chemists claimed they are ‘barely coping’ as they desperatel­y try to source medication, with one reporting they were forced to quit the profession after 35 years due to the stress.

The nationwide survey revealed a shortfall was reported across all 36 major categories of medicines. These include statins, anti-depressant­s, eye drops, wound dressings and decongesta­nts. It means some patients turn up at their pharmacy with a GP prescripti­on, only to be sent home empty-handed as their medication is out of stock.

The shortages have been most severe for HRT, which hundreds of thousands rely on to relieve crippling menopause symptoms.

An audit seen by the Daily Mail in August revealed more than half of HRT drugs are out of stock, forcing some women to travel abroad as far away as South Africa to buy them. Anti- depressant­s and anti-psychotic drugs are also in short supply. Last week the Department of Health told doctors to restrict prescripti­ons of common anti-depressant fluoxetine – often issued under the brand name Prozac.

Experts say the reasons for the shortages are complex and there are several interlocki­ng causes.

These include the introducti­on in February of new EU regulation­s, supply lines being stretched due to globalisat­ion and manufactur­ers prioritisi­ng more lucrative markets. The Department of Health has stressed current supply issues are not linked to Brexit. However, health chiefs have repeatedly warned they expect the situation to deteriorat­e if Britain crashes out of the EU without a deal on October 31.

And suppliers are under order to build up at least six weeks’ extra stocks just in case. Last night GPs warned they are forced to spend hours trying to find alternativ­e medication for patients. Dr Jameel said: ‘Practices often won’t know that a drug is in short supply until patients return from the pharmacy, and these extra GP appointmen­ts can dramatical­ly add to their already burgeoning workload – as well as distressin­g patients by delaying their treatment.’

One pharmacist who took part in the survey said their team is ‘barely coping. We are on a knife-edge’.

Thomas Cox, from Chemist + Druggist, said: ‘Our survey results show the true scope of medicines shortages for the first time.’ A Department of Health spokesman said: ‘We fully understand the concerns of those who require medication­s in their daily lives and want to reassure them that we are doing everything appropriat­e so they can access the medicines they need.’

 ?? SOURCE: Chemist+Druggist ?? Figures show percentage of 402 pharmacies that have struggled to source these drugs in the past six months
SOURCE: Chemist+Druggist Figures show percentage of 402 pharmacies that have struggled to source these drugs in the past six months
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