Western Daily Press

Pharmacies ballot over action on funding cuts

- ELLA PICKOVER wdp@reachplc.com

PHARMACIST­S are to be balloted over potential “work-torule” action amid a row over funding.

Action could see pharmacies opening for shorter hours or potentiall­y providing fewer services.

Pharmacy leaders said the ability to provide safe care was being put at risk by a decline in funding.

The National Pharmacy Associatio­n (NPA), which represents community pharmacies, has called for a £1.3 billion funding increase in England.

The NPA has launched a ballot of members asking if they will reduce their service unless there is more money made available for pharmacies.

The NPA is not a trade union, so any outcome of the ballot would be advisory. But the associatio­n said that action could start before Christmas if the majority of those balloted vote in favour.

Action could potentiall­y include: pharmacies opening only for the minimum number of hours; withdrawal the provision of free deliveries for medication and potentiall­y serving notice on some services – such as some emergency contracept­ion services or stop smoking support.

The organisati­on, which represents 6,000 community pharmacies across the UK, said that it is the first time that it has balloted its members on work-to-rule actions.

The ballot says: “Community pharmacies are committed to providing a safe service. But our ability to provide that safe provision will soon be put at risk by continued declining funding, mass pharmacy closures and growing workloads.

“We are putting the NHS leaders on notice that we cannot guarantee community pharmacy services will remain safe into the future if current depressed funding, pharmacy closures and increasing workload trends continue.”

Paul Rees, chief executive of the NPA, said: “It pains us to take this step but pharmacies are being pushed to the brink by a decade of real terms cuts that has slashed 40% from their funding.

“Pharmacies are routinely required to dispense NHS medicines at a loss, 1,500 have been forced to close in the past decade, while others have had to cut hours to try and make ends meet. That is not acceptable and is hitting patients hard.

“We desperatel­y want to work with Wes Streeting and the new Government to unleash the vast potential of pharmacies to deliver the better health in the community that we all want. But despite big settlement­s for junior doctors and train drivers since the election there is no sign – as yet – of an end to the chronic real-terms cuts that is literally driving dedicated healthcare profession­als in pharmacies out of business.”

The Department of Health and Social Care has been approached for comment.

It pains us to take this step but pharmacies are being pushed to the brink by a decade of real terms cuts that has slashed 40% from their funding PAUL REES, NPA

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