The Guardian (USA)

Doctors like me get the blame when hospitals run out of medicines. Politician­s get off scotfree

- Ammad Butt

Medicine shortages in the UK have been a regular feature on newspaper front pages in recent years. As a doctor on the frontline, I see how this instabilit­y in our medicine supply chain is playing out on the ground.

I work in a large city hospital and am used to meeting disgruntle­d patients who have had to wait hours in clinic to receive treatment. But just imagine their concern when I have to explain to them that the medication we would usually treat them with is not available, and that they will have to take an alternativ­e instead or stay in hospital for even longer as a result.

In the past year, I have heard of patients having to go without medication for common conditions such as attention deficit hyperactiv­ity disorder (ADHD), diabetes and even acne that would otherwise be easily managed, or being forced to take alternativ­es that are less appropriat­e. And new EU plans for its members to work together to stockpile key medicines will only worsen shortages in the UK.

Patients tell me they feel others are receiving better treatment than they are. And they are right, in some ways. What am I supposed to tell them? Healthcare profession­als are being put in a difficult situation having to explain why we are making compromise­s in their care. I worry this will only further increase negativity and abuse towards NHS staff, which has been on the rise in recent years. It all adds to the sense among patients and healthcare profession­als alike that the health service is not working for the most vulnerable.

Seeing the tangible outcome of shortages of certain types of medication is worrying. Some patients who rely on medication to manage their ADHD are going weeks without it, despite it being vital for their mental health during what has already been a difficult winter. For some of them, this means they are unable to continue to live their lives in a functional way, being unable to work and even carry out basic day-to-day tasks until their medication arrives at the pharmacy.

The situation is similar for some anti-epileptic medication­s, shortages of which can be incredibly dangerous. Patients who aren’t on the correct medication can develop seizures requiring them to be put into an induced coma, which can have life-changing implicatio­ns. Thankfully, I have not yet heard of a case due to shortages but this is something that doctors such as me worry could happen if the supply crisis is not addressed.

The insecticid­e permethrin, used to treat scabies infection, is another medication that has been in short supply. Scabies is on the rise in Britain and the shortage of permethrin could mean the condition cannot be treated before it can spread. Some patients with suspected scabies are being told to isolate in hospital, which does not kill the parasite and potentiall­y exposes others to infection. It also means a longer stay in hospital for those affected.

With the NHS already in desperate need of beds during the winter months, having to treat patients in hospital when they would normally be sent home with medication comes at a price – both for the NHS and the communitie­s they serve.

There has been a recent shortage of a tablet known as Sando-K, which is prescribed very often in hospital to treat low potassium levels. Doctors in some parts of the country are having to instead prescribe a fluid potassium chloride bag, which is given intravenou­sly and puts elderly patients with comorbidit­ies at a greater risk ofcomplica­tions.

Different issues have been suggested as the root cause for the supply shortages, from Brexit to increased taxes on pharmaceut­ical companies, to manufactur­ing issues. But, whatever the ultimate cause, to me, it is becoming crystal clear that political inaction is worsening the situation. Recent figures suggest that since 2022, the number of medication shortages has almost doubled, and it is of no benefit to healthcare profession­als or patients for the government to regurgitat­e the same excuses every time this happens.

We have been weathering this storm for too long, so why are our leaders so afraid to act? It should be an absolute scandal that in 21st-century Britain our medicine supply is so unstable that doctors are having to make compromise­s to treat patients appropriat­ely.

Patients need to know that it is not the staff, who often work 60-hour weeks or more to look after them, who are at fault. As doctors, our most important job – to care for our communitie­s – is only getting harder. Our politician­s must take action now to address this situation before more lives are hurt.

Ammad Butt is a freelance writer and foundation doctor at University Hospitals Birmingham

 ?? Photograph: Kirsty O’Connor/PA ?? ‘Some patients who rely on medication to manage their ADHD are going weeks without it.’
Photograph: Kirsty O’Connor/PA ‘Some patients who rely on medication to manage their ADHD are going weeks without it.’

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States