Credit: This story was first seen on The Guardian
The NHS is to stop giving patients travel vaccinations, gluten-free foods and some drugs that can be bought over the counter in an attempt to rescue its ailing finances, The Guardian reports.
Simon Stevens, the chief executive of NHS England, announced the changes in an interview with the Daily Mail in which he detailed new efforts to get better value for money so that money saved could instead be spent on promising therapies that have recently been developed.
GPs will be told to not prescribe medications such as those for upset stomachs, travel sickness and haemorrhoids in the drive to eliminate waste from the NHS’s £120bn annual budget.
Stevens said: “We’ve got to tackle some of the waste which is still in the system. The NHS is a very efficient health service but like every country’s health service there is inefficiency and waste. There’s £114m being spent on medicine for upset tummies, haemorrhoids, travel sickness, indigestion, [and] and that’s before you get to the £22m-plus on gluten-free that you can also now get at Morrisons, Lidl or Tescos.
“Part of what we are trying to do is make sure that we make enough headroom to spend money on innovative new drugs by not wasting it on these kind of items.”
Next month, NHS England will start reviewing 10 items that it says are “ineffective, unnecessary [and] inappropriate for prescription on the NHS, or indeed unsafe”, which together cost the service £128m a year. The Department of Health is expected to then issue new guidance advising GPs that they are not prescribed.
They include omega 3 and fish oils; the painkiller fentanyl: lidocaine medicated plasters; a tablet used to treat high blood pressure called doxazosin MR; and a drug called tadalafil, which is used to treat erectile dysfunction, along with gluten-free foods and travel vaccines.
NHS Clinical Commissioners, which represents England’s 209 NHS clinical commissioning groups (CCGs) – the GP-led bodies that hold health budgets locally – has asked NHS England to look into whether the 10 items are a good use of scarce cash when the NHS is undergoing the tightest budgetary squeeze in its 69-year history.
Many other common medications could soon be added to the banned list. NHS England said: “In light of the financial challenges faced by the NHS, further work will consider other medicines which are of relatively low clinical value or priority or are readily available over the counter and in some instances, at far lower cost, such as treatment for coughs and colds, antihistamines, indigestion and heartburn medication and suncream. Guidance will support clinical commissioning groups in making decisions locally about what is prescribed on the NHS.”
Frontline doctors said the idea should help the NHS to prioritise spending but they called for safeguards to protect vulnerable groups.
Professor Helen Stokes-Lampard, the chair of the RCGP, said: “We do welcome these proposals but cautiously. I think a blanket ban might well introduce some unfair problems.”
Speaking to BBC Radio 4’s Today programme, she added: “The difficulty is when people don’t pay prescription charges, so they are entitled to free medication on the NHS, and that’s when they’ll be difficult conversations. GPs don’t want to be rationing. It is time that country needs these difficult conversations but we mustn’t put at risk the health of the vulnerable.”
Dr Amanda Doyle, the NHS Clinical Commissioners co-chair, said: “The NHS is in quite constrained financial circumstances and what we are trying to do is prioritise our spend. We are currently spending hundreds of millions of pounds on things we would generally consider to be low priority for funding and we are looking at ways of reducing that spending so we can direct the funding in to things that take a higher priority.”
But Norman Lamb, the Liberal Democrats’ shadow health secretary, said: “This creeping retreat of the NHS should not be happening without a national discussion about how we can afford a modern, efficient and effective health and care system. We do have to confront tough choices about whether we all pay more or whether the NHS does less but the public should be part of that discussion. And the bottom line is that this is intended to save £1bn over two years when we face a shortfall of over £10bn by 2020. This does not solve the massive problem we face.”
NHS bosses hope the moves could ultimately save as much as £400m a year. The service is facing serious financial problems. NHS trusts in England recorded a deficit of £2.45bn last year and are expected to end this financial year almost £1bn in the red again, despite repeated warnings to get their finances in order.
An NHS spokesman said: “New guidelines will advise CCGs on the commissioning of medicines generally assessed as low priority and will provide support to clinical commissioning groups, prescribers and dispensers.
“The increasing demand for prescriptions for medication that can be bought over the counter at relatively low cost, often for self-limiting or minor conditions, underlines the need for all healthcare professionals to work even closer with patients to ensure the best possible value from NHS resources, whilst eliminating wastage and improving patient outcomes.”
Stevens’ money-saving initiative is a foretaste of a major initiative he will unveil on Friday. He will announce details of his long-awaited ‘delivery plan’ to fulfil his pledge, first made in October 2014 in his Five Year Forward View modernisation blueprint, to radically transform how the health service works by 2020 so that it delivers better care and closes the £22bn gap that is expected to open up in its own finances by then in order to remain sustainable.
He will give the go-ahead to between six and 10 of the 44 sustainability and transformation plans (STP), one covering each part of England, which are intended to implement his ideas, which centre on moving a lot of care out of hospitals and treating patients closer to home and keeping them healthier so that they avoid expensive £400-a-night unnecessary stays in hospital.
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