Aspirin prices 'rise 1000%' amid supply shortage

Oprah Flash,West Midlandsand
Elliot Webb,BBC Hereford and Worcester
News imageMo Kolia A man with a very short beard is wearing glasses, a white shirt and a grey blazer. He is standing in front of row of medication boxes.Mo Kolia

A pharmacist has said the cost of aspirin has "risen 1000%" amid a shortage across the country.

According to the National Pharmacy Association (NPA) 86 per cent of its surveyed pharmacies have been unable to supply aspirin to their patients.

Mo Kolia, the superintendent pharmacist at Knights in Redditch and Bromsgrove, said supply chain issues had led those who do have stock to raise the price.

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

About 50.9 million items of aspirin were prescribed in the UK between January and October last, the NPA said, making it one of the most commonly prescribed drugs in the country.

Patients needing a regular supply include those with a history of strokes, heart disease, chronic kidney disease and diabetes.

"Suppliers have said that they are having difficulty in manufacturing, it could be due to a difficulty in obtaining raw materials from Europe but we haven't been told the specifics but we know there is certainly an issue around getting supplies into the UK," Kolia told BBC Hereford and Worcester.

He added: "We had this problem last year with penicillin, it's an ongoing issue but it's worsening. We've just been informed that another anti-coagulation medication, apixaban, is now going out of stock."

News image A packet of painkillers and a glass of water
The cost of the medication has also risen in supermarkets pharmacists say

Some pharmacies have reported having to tightly ration aspirin for patients with the most acute heart conditions or those in need of emergency prescriptions. A number have also said they have stopped making aspirin available for over the counter sales.

Kolia added: "The suppliers that have got aspirin have increased the price by 1000% so no pharmacy is going to be able to afford to get it in."

He gave one example of an even greater increase than that: "There's a supplier I've looked at today which is charging £7.82 for a box of aspirin which we previously paid 38p for.

"You may find many supermarkets where they have managed to get a hold of stock but they have increased their prices so you might previously have got aspirin for 70p and now it's around £3.

'Dangerous'

In July last year, the government agreed to invest £520m into life sciences manufacturing but Kolia argued more focus is needed on revamping the supply chain.

The NPA has called on the government to speed up plans to scrap a law that prevents pharmacists from making substitutions to prescriptions when met with low stock issues.

Olivier Picard, chair of the National Pharmacy Association said: "For those pharmacies that can get hold of supply, costs will far exceed what they will be reimbursed by the NHS, yet more signs of a fundamentally broken pharmacy contract in desperate need of reform by the government.

"The status quo is not only frustrating for patients, it is also dangerous."

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