Skip to content
Search

Latest Stories

Pharmacists ‘living in fear for their lives’

Pharmacists say they have suffered a rise in thefts and verbal abuse from customers as tem­pers boil over during lockdown.

Police patrols have been deployed to some out­lets due to scuffles over queues and thieves target­ing medicines.


There have been recent incidents of stock being swiped in south London, Kent, the Midlands, and Lancashire. Community Pharmacy Lancashire, which represents 369 community pharmacies in the county, launched a “care for your pharmacy” cam­paign in response to the incidents, calling on pa­tients to respect staff and lockdown rules.

It comes after a recent survey conducted with the Pharmacists’ Defence Association showed 89 per cent of pharmacy workers witnessed abuse or ag­gression in the past month, with 38 per cent saying waiting times were the biggest cause.

Pharmacist Nader Siabi, from the North East London Pharmaceutical Committee, told our sister publication Eastern Eye: “The reasons for this is pressure for medicines. People get frustrated when they collect as they have to queue up.

“It is no more than two people allowed inside. They take it out on pharmacies.

“Drug addicts take methadone to get them off [substance abuse]. They are getting prescriptions for 14 days, that is a lot of methadone.

“We cannot get enough of it. Addicts come in and cannot get the stock.”

He added: “GPs prescriptions have also been ex­cessive for conventional medicines.

“Surgeries are closed, patients cannot get a con­sultation face-to-face or on the phone, so pharma­cists have to deal with abuse. It’s a system failure, we are picking up the pieces.

“A friend of mine said he normally has 17,000 prescription notes in March, this time he had 26,000.”

The National Pharmacy Association said it has heard of incidents of racist and verbal abuse, threats of throwing bricks, criminal damage and people trolling chemists on Twitter and Facebook.

Mark Lyonette, chief executive of the National Pharmacy Association, told Eastern Eye: “We are receiving disturbing reports from across the country of customers being aggressive towards pharmacy staff, as tensions relating to coronavirus mount.

“Pharmacists are on the NHS frontline during the coronavirus pandemic and are putting their own health at risk to serve the public.

“The behaviour of this small minority of custom­ers is intolerable.

“Most patients and customers treat staff with courtesy, understanding that pharmacists are among the NHS heroes of this crisis.”

Other recent incidents include a burglar stealing 300 diazepam tablets after breaking into a pharma­cy in Blackburn, Lancashire, in April – but then having to call the police when he got stuck inside.

Krunal Vyas, pharmacist manager at Sheppey Community Hospital Pharmacy in Kent, said he was punched in the ear by a customer who was told his wife’s prescription was not ready.

Vyas said: “The one question my mind raises every single day is: should I keep putting my family at risk by working on the front line?

“We are trying to save people’s lives, but our lives are in great danger by not having enough protection – and now with the fear that someone, somewhere may get angry and punch you. What if that someone has a knife with them?”

The PDA (Pharmacists’ Defence Association) has called for “zero tolerance needed to stop verbal abuse, intimidation, threats, racism, sexism and physical attacks” on pharmacy staff.

Lord Roy Kennedy, the Labour peer, said: “I fully support the PDA’s campaign of zero tolerance of abuse against pharmacists and their staff. During the Covid-19 crisis they are working hard to keep us safe and dispense the medicines we need.”

More For You

Antibiotic prescribing for sore throats in England's pharmacies is twice as high as in Wales

Antibiotic supply rate was 72.7% under England’s Acute Sore Throat Pharmacy First compared to just 29.9% under Wales’ Sore Throat Test and Treat (STTT) scheme in six months.

Getty Images

Sore throat treatment: England pharmacies twice as likely to prescribe antibiotics as Welsh counterparts

A new study has highlighted significant differences in antibiotic use for sore throat treatment between pharmacies in England and Wales, suggesting that incorporating throat swabs to confirm bacterial infections could help reduce “unnecessary antibiotic supply.”

The study, published in the Journal of Antimicrobial Chemotherapy and first reported by The Independent, found that pharmacies in England were twice as likely to prescribe antibiotics for sore throats compared to those in Wales.

Keep ReadingShow less
GPs to play crucial role in transforming Wales’ health service

Jeremy Miles

(Photo credit: www.gov.wales )

Strengthening GPs’ role key to transforming healthcare - Jeremy Miles

Welsh health secretary Jeremy Miles has recognised the need to transform health services and bring healthcare closer to home.

Speaking at the recent Welsh Local Medical Committees Conference, he emphasised that strengthening the role of GPs would be crucial in improving patient healthcare and tackling NHS waiting lists.

Keep ReadingShow less
NPA and IPA urge NHS England to release pharmacy economic analysis immediately

Pharmacy bodies call for transparency on the funding gap amid ongoing contract negotiations.

Getty Images

Pharmacy bodies demand immediate release of economic analysis

The National Pharmacy Association (NPA) and the Independent Pharmacies Association (IPA) have jointly written to NHS England, demanding the immediate release of the independent economic analysis of pharmacy finances commissioned last autumn.

An open letter, signed by the owners of 3,034 pharmacies in England, calls for transparency on the funding gap amid ongoing contract negotiations.

Keep ReadingShow less
Discrimination: Asian and Black patients report lack of trust in primary care providers

Ethnic minority groups had worse experiences in their communication with their GP practice and felt taken less seriously

Getty Images

Survey reveals alarming rates of ethnic discrimination in NHS primary care

A recent survey by the NHS Race and Health Observatory has highlighted a worrying lack of trust in NHS primary care services among Black, Asian, and ethnic minority patients, who reported experiencing “racial or ethnic discrimination.”

Out of 2,680 survey respondents, only 55% reported trusting primary care providers to meet their health needs most or all of the time

Keep ReadingShow less