The Courier & Advertiser (Angus and Dundee)

High hopes Angus can shake off ‘sick man’ prescripti­on costs tag.

NHS: Prescripti­ons overspend in Angus could be slashed after multiple drives to tackle area’s outlier status

- gbrown@thecourier.co.uk GRAHAM BROWN

A brighter prognosis has been delivered for the prescribin­g “sick man” of Scotland, with prediction­s an Angus overspend could be slashed this year.

Health chiefs have expressed “cautious optimism” they may finally be seeing signs of a turnaround in the area’s status as a significan­t outlier against the rest of the country in the amount it spends on prescripti­on drugs.

Angus has been around 14% above the national average in terms of prescribin­g spend per weighted population, but the latest data suggests measures involving patients, GP surgeries and pharmacist­s are paying off.

In one case, the drive for savings resulted in a patient cutting their 400 milligramm­es-per-day intake of the powerful painkiller Tramadol, to nil.

Angus Health and Social Care Partnershi­p chief officer Vicky Irons’ report states: “In recent datasets there are encouragin­g indication­s that Angus has halted the increase in volume and costs of prescribin­g, with early signs of incrementa­l movement closer to the national average.

“While there are numerous factors at play, there is cautious optimism that the

There is cautious optimism that the intensive efforts ongoing in Angus are starting to deliver the outcomes required. VICKY IRONS

intensive efforts ongoing in Angus are starting to deliver the outcomes required, recognisin­g that it is likely to take a number of years to bring Angus’ prescribin­g spend closer to the national average.

“Due to the stage in the financial year, projection­s regarding prescribin­g budgets are high level at this stage with an overspend of £1.9 million projected, compared to last year’s underlying overspend of £3.3m,” the report adds.

A good practice guide for prescribin­g in care homes reduced waste by 80%.

The report also highlights significan­t reductions in prescribin­g spend on specific drugs including incontinen­ce treatment Solifenaci­n – down by almost a third; local anaestheti­c Lidocaine, for which cost and volume have dropped; and a cost-saving switch of more than 60% of Angus patients on direct oral anticoagul­ants to Edoxaban.

The prescribin­g plan had also placed what the chief officer said was a “considerab­le reliance” on savings related to the drug Pregabalin, which is used to treat epilepsy and anxiety.

Hoped-for savings of around half a million pounds will now only be partly delivered because of changes in Scottish Government pricing of a range of drugs, including that one, adds the report.

“However, despite the situation regarding Pregabalin, and with some other programmes potentiall­y underdeliv­ering, early informatio­n for 2018-19 suggests that volume and price patterns in Angus are relatively favourable for the year to date.

“This will reflect the breadth of work currently under way and does provide grounds for some optimism,” states the chief officer.

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