Daily Mail

Doctors must stop giving out a pill for every ill – NHS chief

- By Shaun Wooller Health Correspond­ent

Family doctors must stop over-prescribin­g and acting as if there is a ‘pill for every ill’, the nHs medical chief has demanded.

Too many patients are taking an unnecessar­y cocktail of drugs that risk harmful side-effects and waste millions of pounds, Professor sir stephen Powis warned.

The nHs medical director said the money could be better spent on tackling record waiting lists.

many patients have missed out on medicine reviews over the past two years as family doctors slashed faceto-face appointmen­ts.

at least 15 per cent of the population – 8.4million people – take more than five drugs a day, with primary care prescripti­ons costing the nHs in england £9.7billion a year.

a review last year found a 10 per cent reduction in prescripti­ons is realistic, suggesting the nHs could save almost £1billion a year on waste.

Furthermor­e, 6.5 per cent of all hospital admissions are caused by adverse drug reactions at an estimated cost to the nHs in england of £2billion a year.

sir stephen yesterday urged patients who are taking multiple drugs to get prescripti­ons reviewed.

speaking at the nHs Confed expo conference in liverpool, he said: ‘The approach of “a pill for every ill” should never be a starting point. reducing unnecessar­y prescripti­ons is more important than ever.

‘ The nHs is rolling out expert pharmacy teams who can give advice to patients.’

sir stephen also called on GP surgeries and pharmacies

to resume normal service, offering health checks and managing long-term health conditions. He said: ‘i’m keen that our primary care workforce is able to get back to checking blood pressure, checking cholestero­l.

‘and that’s where the extended work of perhaps community pharmacist­s can bring additional capacity.’

sir stephen’s comments came as health leaders launched a ‘beyond Pills’ campaign that highlights the benefit of ‘social prescribin­g’.

This involves referring people to the likes of art, gardening and exercise classes to improve health.

doctors prescribed 1.14 billion items outside of hospitals last year.

Campaigner­s say dispensing in primary care doubled from ten prescripti­on items per head per year in 1996 to 20 in 2016.

dr michael dixon, chairman of the College of medicine and medical adviser to Prince

Charles, said: ‘a new medical mindset is needed, which goes to the heart of true health care. The possibilit­ies of social prescripti­on are limitless.’

The beyond Pills campaign wants social prescribin­g to be ‘embedded’ throughout doctors’ training curriculum and incentives for reducing the unnecessar­y use of drugs.

meanwhile, patients aged over 75 and those with longterm conditions or on multiple drugs are being encouraged to get their prescripti­ons reviewed annually.

Caroline abrahams, charity director of age UK, said: ‘many older people live with multiple and complex health problems and too often the option they’re given is to take increasing amounts of medication.’

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