marchie
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The cost of drugs wastage to the NHS is staggeringly high, so, limiting the potential losses that arise because of patient deaths, adverse reactions such as the 'Ramipril cough' and n number of problems with patients needing to change to a different statin is a very pragmatic cost saving process. My January 2023 mini stroke occurred the week after I had received my 2 months prescription renewal, and involved the binning of 3 boxes each of Omeprazole, Aspirin and EzetemibeHas been about 1 year since I was last able to get one of my items, fortunately not one my life depends on.
Our pharmacy now only prescribes 1 month supply on any new repeat prescriptions, previously it was 2 months. Apparently this is a new cost saving procedure introduced by the NHS. How the ————— is this supposed to save money? It means the Doctor has to authorise prescriptions twice as often and the Pharmacist has to process them twice as often. Doubles the paperwork too. I can see that it might slightly improve the NHS cash flow but this is an accountants idea of a cost saving, what it really means is extra work for everyone else.
Steve