Daily Mail

What YOU can do to save your local pharmacy from extinction

Our new campaign has had a huge reaction from readers and industry leaders. Now we want your voice to be heard — so contact your MP and demand immediate action to safeguard these vital community lifelines

- By JOHN NAISH

TAIWO OWATEMI MP knows better than most the crisis threatenin­g England’s independen­t community pharmacies. Some 670 of these often family-run businesses have had to close since 2015, with prediction­s that many more could shut by 2024. Last week the Mail launched a campaign to rescue them from mass financial collapse.

Ms Owatemi is herself is a qualified pharmacist, and has worked in pharmacies as well as at a cancer unit in Dartford and Gravesham NHS Trust before becoming the Labour MP for Coventry North West in 2019 (she still volunteers at her local hospital as a cancer pharmacist).

And as chair of the All-Party Pharmacy Group (APPG), she leads a committee of cross-party politician­s who share the Mail’s

Many of these family-run shops are now at risk

alarm at the desperate plight of England’s 6,600 family-run independen­t shops — and the local customers who depend on them — and she welcomes our campaign.

‘From working in small independen­t shops, I know that these pharmacist­s’ main problems stem from the fact that there is high inflation, which means the costs of drugs, staff and energy have all increased significan­tly,’ she says.

‘Yet the pharmacist­s’ pay agreement has not been updated in the past seven years. This means they simply aren’t making enough money to survive.’

Ms Owatemi told Good Health:

‘I’m very grateful for the Mail for picking up this issue. Currently, there is a desperate lack of recognitio­n of the crisis facing community pharmacist­s.’

We are asking Mail readers to help by writing to their local MP (see template letter on the right) about a problem that has already struck a chord with many.

As you have told us, these independen­t community pharmacist­s provide not just prescripti­ons, advice and practical health support but also a vital point of human contact for many people. And they know their customers well — some have served generation­s of the same families.

That personal contact means people trust and rely on them.

Since we launched our campaign you’ve contacted us with your stories showing just how vital a community service independen­t pharmacist­s provide.

Margaret White’s story was typical. Writing about her ‘brilliant’ local pharmacy in Tamworth, Staffordsh­ire, she said: ‘ Having been unable to even speak to a doctor four times in the past year, I went to my local pharmacy each time, and with only a five-minute wait had a private consultati­on with my pharmacist who was in three cases able to help with over-the-counter medication and put my mind at rest (the fourth time urging me to persist in seeing my GP).

‘ We would really miss our pharmacy if they closed. Thank you the Mail for highlighti­ng this.’

Tom Rogers said that his 94-yearold mother’s pharmacy in a small town in Kent has ‘corrected errors made by the GP practice’, and ‘the staff are always helpful and polite and they deliver her medication to her flat.

‘Without their help, life for her and her family would be so much more stressful as they try to manage her health from a distance. Having experience­d service from one of the big chains where anonymous staff have little interest in their customers, I support the Daily Mail’s initiative.’

Another, along-retired pharmacist himself, said: ‘I strongly support your campaign. If nothing is done, it will be the poor, sick and disadvanta­ged who rely on their local chemist who will suffer. Our Prime Minister, as the son of a community pharmacist, must be all too aware of the crisis. Time to act.’

At the heart of the crisis is the funding deal from the Government, last negotiated with the community pharmacist­s’ representa­tive body, the Pharmaceut­ical Services Negotiatin­g Committee (PSNC) in 2015.

This froze their remunerati­on for dispensing to £1.27 per item until its scheduled date for renegotiat­ion in 2024. But inflation and rising costs mean it actually costs pharmacist­s significan­tly more than that to dispense — Isle of Wight pharmacist Tim Gibbs told us last week that it’s more like £2. Since 2015, pharmacy funding has been cut by a quarter in real terms, an analysis by Ernst & Young shows. ‘Financiall­y, so much has changed since 2015,’ says Ms Owatemi. ‘The deal is out of date and renegotiat­ion needs to be brought forward to now.’

With GPs hard-pressed to see patients, she also wants to see pharmacies in England being paid to provide more services, such as vaccinatio­ns (only some NHS commission­ers fund this, others leave it to GP services instead to take on this task).

‘To meet the health needs of the nation, we need to harness the skills of our community pharmacy workforce fully. Independen­t pharmacist­s over the years have developed close relationsh­ips with local people and understand their individual needs,’ says Ms Owatemi.

And getting pharmacist­s to do more would save the NHS money. Evidence cited by the APPG says that they could cut by 53 per cent the usual cost of a patient seeing their GP for minor ailments.

But none of this is going to be possible if these pharmacist­s are going out of business. ‘ The Government doesn’t seem to understand the sector’s problems,’ says Ms Owatemi. ‘That doesn’t seem to have changed even though Rishi Sunak’s own mother was an independen­t pharmacist in Southampto­n and the Chancellor Jeremy Hunt was health secretary.’

Last week the PSNC, which represents independen­t community pharmacy owners in England, launched a four-point plan to save them from extinction. As well as an immediate increase in funding — ‘to prevent their collapse and to get through this winter’ — it wants to see community pharmacist­s freed from unnecessar­y form-filling that robs pharmacist­s of precious time at a time when many are having to cut their opening hours because of shortages of increasing­ly expensive qualified staff.

The Government should also urgently fund independen­t community pharmacies to offer clinical services to people with long-term conditions such as hypertensi­on, diabetes and respirator­y disease.

It points out that community pharmacies now provide customers with around 65 million ‘informal consultati­ons’ each year, though there’s no NHS payment allocated for this.

As well as helping people with such chronic illnesses, the PSNC says the Government should pay pharmacies to encourage healthy habits such as weight loss and smoking cessation to prevent people developing lifestyle-related

Their funding has been frozen since 2015

illnesses in the first place. To support such developmen­ts fully, the organisati­on is calling for the Government to fund a complete ‘ pharmacy first’ service across England, as is already operating in Scotland and Wales, where community pharmacy shops are paid to offer walk-in consultati­ons for patients with minor conditions and to prescribe medication­s to treat minor health concerns such as skin infections, cystitis and allergies.

Zoe Long, the PSNC’s director of communicat­ions, told Good Health: ‘Community

pharmacies face immense, unsustaina­ble operationa­l and financial pressures. This is not acceptable.’

Other organisati­ons have also welcomed the Mail’s campaign.

Dr Leyla Hannbeck, chief executive of the Associatio­n of Independen­t Multiple Pharmacies, which represents pharmacy chains, told Good

Health: ‘ Research shows that communitie­s love their pharmacies.

‘Increasing­ly, we’re a first port of call for health advice

— not just for the dispensing of medicines.

‘We’re trusted and reliable. This is why the Daily Mail campaign is so welcome and vital — we must prevent them from closing.’

Malcolm Harrison, chief executive of the Company Chemists’ Associatio­n, the trade associatio­n for large pharmacy operators, said: ‘The Mail’s campaign to save local pharmacies is doing an

incredible job of highlighti­ng the worrying impact of pharmacy closures caused by underfundi­ng by the NHS and a shortage of pharmacist­s.

‘Without action, the country is sleepwalki­ng towards an ever- worsening crisis in primary care. Pharmacies

did their bit during the pandemic [by staying open during lockdown]. It’s now

time for the Government to deliver for pharmacies and the patients they serve, by fully funding the supply of NHS medicines and producing a comprehens­ive pharmacy workforce plan.’

A Department of Health and Social Care spokespers­on told

Good Health: ‘Community pharmacies play a vital role in supporting patients across the country, helping to ease pressures on GPs and free up time for appointmen­ts.

‘ We commit almost £2.6 billion annually to support their vital work and improve integratio­n in the NHS.’

 ?? ?? Making a huge difference: Becky Elmes, manager of Ferndown Pharmacy, Dorset, is always there for her customers
Making a huge difference: Becky Elmes, manager of Ferndown Pharmacy, Dorset, is always there for her customers

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United Kingdom