logo
Pharmacies pause action while they examine Government funding deal

Pharmacies pause action while they examine Government funding deal

Yahoo31-03-2025

Pharmacies across England have paused taking action such as cutting opening hours while they look at a new funding deal from the Government.
The Department of Health and Social Care (DHSC) has promised to 'rebuild community pharmacy' as it announced it had reached an agreement with Community Pharmacy England for a funding increase over two years.
The National Pharmacy Association (NPA), which represents 6,000 independent community pharmacies, has previously warned that pharmacists were facing a 'financial cliff edge'.
It said the effect of National Insurance and National Living Wage rises would mean pharmacies in England faced £250 million of unplanned costs and recommended its members took collective action from the start of April if there was no sufficient package agreed with the Government.
On Monday, the DHSC said it had agreed to a final funding settlement for 2024/25 worth an extra £106 million compared to the previous year, and a further £375 million for 2025/26.
It said a further £30 million had also been freed up by devolving funding for blood pressure and contraception services to pharmacies and that it would write off £193 million of debt for community pharmacy owners.
The NPA said planned collective action was now paused while it consulted members and worked through the details of the deal.
Nick Kaye, chairman of the NPA, said: 'After a decade of 40% cuts to their funding that has left the pharmacy network on its knees, it is good to see a concrete sign that ministers want to support pharmacies.
'No one wants to reduce services through protest action so we'll look carefully at the detail and consult our members, who are facing substantial cost increases from April 1, to understand what this means for the future of their services so we can recommend next steps.
'The Government inherited an intolerable situation after more than a decade of real-terms cuts and today's settlement is a step forward.
'However, the truth is that because of a decade of neglect, it also falls a long way short of the NHS's own estimates of the true cost of providing pharmacy services.'
The DHSC also announced a series of reforms alongside the funding boost, including making the morning-after pill free at NHS pharmacies and boosting financial incentives for pharmacists to identify patients with undiagnosed high blood pressure to take pressure off GPs.
Health Minister Stephen Kinnock said: 'We're working to turn around a decade of underfunding and neglect that has left the sector on the brink of collapse.
'This package of record investment and reform is a vital first step to getting community pharmacies back on their feet and fit for the future.'
Community Pharmacy England chief executive Janet Morrison said: 'As highly trusted and accessible healthcare locations, community pharmacies have so much to offer patients and the NHS to help shift more care into communities.
'But we came to these negotiations as a sector in crisis – with the impact of a decade's worth of real-terms cuts to funding leaving pharmacy businesses fighting to survive, and closures continuing at an alarming rate.
'We are pleased that this settlement takes a positive first step in the right direction for pharmacies, towards stabilisation and a better future.'

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Children in most deprived areas more likely to visit A&E and be obese
Children in most deprived areas more likely to visit A&E and be obese

Yahoo

time19 hours ago

  • Yahoo

Children in most deprived areas more likely to visit A&E and be obese

Children living in England's most deprived areas are more likely to visit A&E, be overweight or obese and suffer from tooth decay, a new report by aid agency Unicef UK has found. The organisation has called on the Government to lift its two-child benefit cap after its findings showed that where children grow up until the age of five has 'a significant impact' on their early outcomes and future potential. In the report published on Monday, every local authority in England was analysed against its level of deprivation and a range of early childhood health and educational outcomes. It found that, when considering early years development, the most deprived authorities were more than twice as far away from achieving the Government's 'good level' target of 75% than the most affluent areas. Only four of the 151 upper tier local authorities in England are currently meeting that target. Nearly twice as many children suffer from late-stage, untreated tooth decay in the most deprived areas (29%) compared to the least deprived (15%), while five-year-old children living in the poorest communities are three times more likely to have had teeth removed due to decay, the report found. Almost a quarter of reception-age children in the most deprived areas (24%) are overweight or obese, while general obesity levels in those areas are more than double those of children in the most affluent areas (12.9%, compared to 6%). There is also an average of 1,020 A&E visits per 1,000 babies and young children in the most deprived areas, an increase of 55% on rates in the most affluent areas, the report found. The five local authorities with the highest levels of deprivation – Blackpool, Knowsley, Liverpool, Kingston upon Hull, and Middlesbrough – were each in the lowest 20% for five of the six child wellbeing measures used in the analysis. Some 1.2 million babies and children under the age of five – 35% of the age group's total population – now live in poverty across England, the report said. It added that child poverty has increased more in the UK then in any of the 38 OECD and EU countries. Among the report's recommendations are long-term, sustainable funding and expanding provision for Family Hubs, recruiting an additional 1,000 health visitors a year and making access to Government-funded childcare hours equal for all children aged two or older, regardless of their location or parental employment. Unicef UK, joined by BBC presenter Dr Chris Van Tulleken, will present a petition calling for investments in early childhood, which has more than 105,000 signatures, to the Prime Minister at 10 Downing Street on Tuesday. Chief executive Dr Philip Goodwin warned the consequences of growing up in poverty can be lifelong and said the report's findings were 'not acceptable'. He said: 'There must be immediate, decisive, and ambitious action by the government. Any further delays will entrench inequality and condemn hundreds of thousands of children to poverty and its effects, as child poverty rates continue to rise. 'The Government must act urgently to lift the two-child limit and the benefit cap and commit to investing in the vital health and education services that support children during their crucial early years.' Introduced in 2015 by then-Conservative chancellor George Osborne, the cap restricts child welfare payments to the first two children born to most families. Sir Keir Starmer said he was 'absolutely determined' to 'drive down' child poverty when he was pressed on the two-child benefit cap in Parliament last week, ahead of the publication of the Government's strategy on the issue.

Stormont minister calls for terminally ill to be allowed state pension early
Stormont minister calls for terminally ill to be allowed state pension early

Yahoo

time19 hours ago

  • Yahoo

Stormont minister calls for terminally ill to be allowed state pension early

A Stormont minister has urged the UK Government to allow the terminally ill early access to their state pension. Communities Minister Gordon Lyons said it is imperative that Government does more to ensure financial security and dignity for people in their final months of life. The measure – proposed by the end-of-life charity Marie Curie – would allow terminally ill individuals to claim their state pension based on national insurance contributions, topped up to at least pension credit-level. Figures from the charity's Dying In Poverty campaign show that around 111,000 people die in poverty each year in the UK, with more than one-in-four working-age individuals facing financial hardship in their final year. Mr Lyons has written to pensions minister Torsten Bell to press for action. 'It is imperative that we do more to ensure financial security and dignity for people in their final months of life and I am urging Minister Bell to take decisive action on this issue,' he said. 'A terminal diagnosis should not be accompanied by the added burden of financial hardship but unfortunately this is the stark – and unacceptable – reality for too many. 'Marie Curie's compassionate and practical solution would allow terminally ill individuals to access the state pension early, providing much-needed financial stability and some peace of mind during the most difficult of times.' On March 31, the Northern Ireland Assembly unanimously backed a private member's motion urging the UK to implement legislative changes that would enable those with a terminal diagnosis to access their state pension early. It is understood that these issues may be tackled in the UK Government's new Pension Schemes Bill. Mr Lyons said he has committed to engaging with the Department for Work and Pensions on behalf of those diagnosed with a terminal illness and to advocating for greater support. He added: 'I am urging the UK Government to act swiftly and compassionately to deliver meaningful change on early access to state pensions. 'No-one should be facing their final months with the added burden of financial distress and I will continue to press for a fair and compassionate system that meets the needs of those who are most vulnerable.' A government spokesperson said: 'No-one should suffer financial hardship because of a health condition, especially people nearing the end of life. 'And our special rules unlock early access to certain benefits and support systems for those nearing the end of their lives. 'Our Pension Schemes Bill will increase the life expectancy threshold for support from six to 12 months, giving more people the help they need at the hardest time of life.'

NHS spends £1.8bn a year on private firms, says GMB in call to end outsourcing
NHS spends £1.8bn a year on private firms, says GMB in call to end outsourcing

Yahoo

time19 hours ago

  • Yahoo

NHS spends £1.8bn a year on private firms, says GMB in call to end outsourcing

A trade union is stepping up calls to end privatisation in the NHS after its research suggested health trusts spend at least £1.8 billion a year on private companies. The GMB said requests using freedom of information laws to more than 200 trusts show they spend £1,831,105,580 annually on outsourced contracts. Almost half the trusts did not respond so the true figure could be far higher, it is claimed. A separate investigation found ambulance trusts across England spent £290 million on private ambulances during the past three years. The total annual spend has almost doubled since 2021/22, according to the data. The GMB said it wants to send a message to the Government from its annual congress in Brighton on Monday. Ambulance worker Mo Akbar will tell delegates: 'GMB members demand an end to privatisation. 'We must bring all outsourced services like cleaning, catering, and facilities back in-house. 'We demand real-terms restorative pay from the 14 years of brutal austerity. 'Workers and communities should have more say in how the NHS is run, ensuring decisions focus on patient care, not financial targets. Health outcomes are tied to poverty, housing, and working conditions, so NHS rebuilding must also address these inequalities. 'This Labour Government will have a crisis of legitimacy if they choose a path of further privatisation of the NHS, which would put at risk the sense of the collectivism that is at the heart of our health service 'We must be resolute in fighting for our National Health Service.'

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into the world of global news and events? Download our app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store