NHS Prescription Charges
Saturday, 04, Jul 2009 02:50
What are NHS prescription charges?
NHS prescription charges are paid by patients for drugs or other treatments prescribed for them by a National Health Service medical practitioner.
As from 1st April 2008 the basic NHS prescription charge in England is £7.10p. However, many people are exempt from paying this fee; indeed according to the Government, 88% of prescription items are dispensed free of charge.
Those exempt include:
Children under 16, pregnant women, people over 60, young people in full-time education, people in receipt of certain benefits such as Income Support or Jobseekers' Allowance and people suffering from specific conditions, such as certain types of physical disability, diabetes, or epilepsy, for which they hold a valid exemption certificate.
Prescription Prepayment Certificates (PPC) offer considerable savings to people who are in need of regular prescriptions. A 3 months PPC costs £27.85 and a 12 months PPC £102.50p. In addition, the NHS Low Income Scheme provides income related help to those not already exempt from NHS charges.
These rules apply only to England. In the rest of the UK prescription charges are a matter for their devolved governments. In Wales prescriptions have been free for everyone since 1st April 2007; the Scottish Assembly plans to abolish all prescription charges by 2011 and the issue is currently under review in Northern Ireland.
Background
Although the NHS, which was founded in 1948, was meant to provide a completely free health service for everyone, a growing drugs bill prompted the introduction of prescription charges in 1952.
The plans were first put forward by the Attlee government in 1951, causing the resignation of a string of ministers, including the "father" of the NHS Aneurin Bevan and the future Prime Minister Harold Wilson. Following Labour's election defeat, in October 1952, the Conservative government set the charge at one shilling per prescription form.
By 1956, the NHS was dispensing 228 million items per year at a cost of £58 million, and the Government raised the charge to one shilling per item to compensate. Three years later, this went up again, to two shillings per item.
In 1965, under Harold Wilson, Labour abolished prescription charges. This caused the NHS drugs bill to soar, as many low-cost items that patients had previously bought for themselves were increasingly prescribed. Labour relented in June 1968, and restored prescription charges, at a higher rate of two shillings and sixpence per item, but introducing a range of exemptions for old and young people, people on benefits, and people with chronic diseases such as diabetes.
On "decimalisation" in 1971, charges stood at 20p per item, where they remained until July 1979, when the new Thatcher government increased them to 45p. Charges were increased twice in 1980, to 70p and then to £1 in December. They have risen every subsequent year since 1982. During the mid-1980s, charges rose at around 20p per year (with the new prices coming into force on April 1), while in the early 1990s this accelerated to 25p per year. When Labour came to power in 1997, the annual rate of increase was reduced to 10p.
In 2001, the Labour-Liberal Democrat Welsh Assembly Government legislated to abolish prescription charges for people aged 16 to 25 in Welsh pharmacies. This generated widespread concerns that English people would flock to Wales to submit their prescriptions, but evidence to date has shown this did not happen.
For many years, local health authorities were responsible for administering the prescription charging regime. In October 2002, however, this role passed to the Prescriptions Pricing Authority (PPA). The PPA's role is to calculate drug and appliance prices, and make appropriate payments to pharmacists and contractors; produce guidance on prescribing for medical practitioners; manage the system of exemptions; and produce and maintain the Drug Tariff, containing the reimbursement prices of a range of prescribable items and remuneration rules.
Controversies
The founders of the NHS regarded the concept of charging as antithetical to the notion of a service "free at the point of use" and controversy continues to surround the issue of prescription charges.
The range of exempt conditions has been widely criticised. The list has not been updated since 1968, and it excludes a number of chronic conditions that have become highly prominent since then. In particular, the scheme does not exempt outpatient treatments for conditions such as cancer, multiple sclerosis, arthritis and HIV/AIDS. The Government, however, has repeatedly indicated its unwillingness to reconsider the exempt list.
In 2002, the Wanless Report - commissioned by the Government - condemned the system of exemptions as "illogical". The class exemptions, the report argued, take no account of ability to pay; wealthy pensioners are exempt, but many poor families are not.
Prescription charges were introduced, at least in part, to deter unnecessary prescribing and keep NHS costs down. However, today many health groups claim that the high cost of prescriptions is having a deleterious effect on health, as people on low incomes find themselves unable to pay.
The Macmillian Cancer Support charity is one organisation currently campaigning for the abolition of prescription charges in England "so that no one is in the position where they can't afford the treatment prescribed by their doctor or health professional."
And Swindon TUC set up a website in August 2008 to support the campaign for abolition, calling on union members and NHS supporters to "take up the campaign in their areas and through their own organisations".
But the Department of Health insists that entitlement to help with health costs "is based on the principle that those who can afford to contribute should do so; while those who are likely to have difficulty in paying should be protected."
However, the British Medical Association has long called for a "fundamental review" of the whole system of prescription charges and exemption categories, claiming there are "many unacceptable inequities and anomalies in the present system".
Nevertheless the BMA states that it does not wish to see the specific clinical categories increased, but warns that there are many other groups of patients who require lifelong treatment, such as those with cystic fibrosis and Parkinson’s Disease, "who are more disadvantaged than some of those presently exempt."
Statistics
Prescription charges are expected to raise £435 million in the next financial year.
Prescription charge increases will stay below the rate of inflation representing the tenth consecutive year that the increase has been held below or around that level.
The increase will mean 25p on prescription charges in England, taking the charge for a single prescription item to £7.10 from 1 April 2008.
In England, 88 per cent of prescription items are free of charge.
Source: Department of Health - March 2008
The NHSBSA Prescription Pricing Division processes over two million prescription items per working day, determining reimbursement and remuneration levels through to payment.
Annual payments to contractors made on behalf of the NHS now total around £7 billion.
Source: NHS Business Services Authority – August 2008
Quotes
"A consultation to review prescription charges in England is due to be published soon by the Government, but they have already stated that they are not prepared to spend one extra penny on prescriptions.
"This means that any reform will inevitably involve some patients losing out. In effect, they will be robbing Peter to pay Paul. We are extremely concerned that this consultation may lead to nothing more than tinkering with an inherently unfair system. "
Macmillan Cancer Support – August 2008
"The level of charge is now such that often it exceeds the actual cost of the drug."
BMA – 2008
“Let us test David Cameron's passion for the NHS. Why not take his slogan of 'sharing the proceeds of growth' and show that need not mean putting tax cuts ahead of investment in public services. Labour could share the proceeds of growth via a more popular route: a manifesto pledge to reduce prescription charges year on year in the next Parliament, seeking to abolish them entirely as resources allow.”
Fabian Society general secretary, Sunder Katwala – speaking after Labour's poor showing in the May 2008 local elections.