£10m a year wasted on unwanted prescriptions (From The Argus)
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£10m a year wasted on unwanted prescriptions
4:20pm Wednesday 17th October 2012 in News By Siobhan Ryan, Health Reporter
More than £10 million is wasted on unused medication in Sussex each year.
Health bosses are urging doctors and pharmacists to think carefully before drugs are prescribed or repeat prescriptions filled out.
Patients are also being asked to talk to their GP or visit their local chemist to discuss their prescriptions and make sure they are getting the right medication.
Around £6 million is wasted in West Sussex alone, with the figure estimated to rise to more than £10 million when Brighton and Hove and East Sussex are taken into account.
The NHS in Sussex spends more than £276 million a year on prescriptions.
The money could be better spent on more nurses, improved treatments or more care for people in need, health bosses say.
The figure emerges as hospitals, primary care and community trusts across the county are battling to save millions of pounds to keep on financial track.
Side effects Around half of all people do not take or use their medicines as prescribed for various reasons, including not liking the side effects, forgetting to take them or believing they no longer need them.
An NHS Sussex spokeswoman said: “We are constantly looking at ways to deliver better and more effective patient care.
“A key part of this is highlighting to patients the need to consider what medicines they actually need and the importance of taking them.
“The fact that many of the medicines are not being used may mean that patients are not fully benefiting from their treatment.
“One of the main concerns is medicines on repeat prescriptions.
“Many medicines are still ordered and collected by patients, which are not needed either because they have stopped using them or because they already have enough supplies.”
The spokeswoman added that it was essential patients picked up only medicine that was really needed.
She said: “Once medicines have been dispensed they cannot be recycled and have to be thrown away – whether they have been used or not.
“We would encourage patients to have a chat with their local pharmacist or GP about their medicines, how to use them effectively, and how to safely dispose of any unused medicines.”
The Royal Pharmaceutical Society is calling on people to talk to their pharmacists about how to get the most out of their medicines.
Society president Martin Astbury said: “Not taking a medicine as prescribed means people don’t receive the real benefit from it.
“As a result, their symptoms may not be managed effectively and their health could suffer further.”
Comments(9)
Council Pound
says...
6:02pm Wed 17 Oct 12
Old Ladys Gin
says...
7:00pm Wed 17 Oct 12
eg A visit to to a doctor for some antibiotic cream for an ingrown hair - how much would it cost? In total including the prescription and the doctors time probably 50 quid.
In France I bought the same cream for 6 euros in an ordinary pharmacy with no prescription needed.
Steph_WS
says...
7:34pm Wed 17 Oct 12
lorrie1
says...
8:26pm Wed 17 Oct 12
Council Pound wrote:I notice the article doesnt even mention the big pharma companys that charge so much for these meds, if they dropped there prices there wouldnt be so much waste.
We all need our Valium in order to freely read this rag!.
Also id like to say that prescriptions are a complete rip off (like everything else)!
My Dr gave me a script for paracetamol and codiene at a cost of £7-65. I ripped up the prescription, went to the local chemist and bought the exact same meds at the exact same strenth for £1-60.
rolivan
says...
8:52pm Wed 17 Oct 12
countrygirl12
says...
10:45pm Wed 17 Oct 12
This wastage is nothing new, unfortunately it has been going on for years and the amount of drugs that are returned to the pharmacy on daily/weekly in enormous quantities is shocking. I, as a pharmacist am extremely responsible when it comes to checking whether items are still required/appropriate for the patient or are they stock piling at home afraid to tell their GP/healthcare professional that they aren't taking it any more for a variety of reasons.
There are a lot of factors that come into play with regards to wastage and I could talk at length about this with regards to the issuing of repeat prescriptions from surgeries , the quantities on the prescription, drugs prescribed, patient demands for a prescription.
The majority of people do not pay prescription charges and it is those patients that I see on a daily basis with prescriptions coming through for paracetamol/antihist
amines/etc items that can be bought v cheap and a lot more conveniently over the counter. It is also these patients that again majority of which dont pay prescription charges that return medicines for dumping. Doctors need to tighten up their prescribing that is without doubt but patients need to take more responsibility for what they are requesting on their repeat prescriptions every month but unfortunately I think its a sign of the times we live in and that money carries value and worth.
The NHS is everyone's responsibility at the end of the day every penny that we throw away is less money that we have to run our essential services that are there when we really need them.
Whitehawkian
says...
10:44am Thu 18 Oct 12
Gym'll fix me
says...
9:36am Fri 19 Oct 12
Whitehawkian wrote:That is why you are called Wasters I think.
I can tell you that nothing goes to waste over this side of town.
Hove Actually says...
5:43pm Wed 17 Oct 12
Or it is used as a reason to keep claiming benefits...........o
r can't you say that?