Pharmacies across the U.K. are reporting widespread shortages of aspirin, one of
the most widely prescribed drugs that is used to prevent heart attacks and
strokes and treat pain.
From a survey of 540 pharmacies, 86 percent had been unable to supply the
medication to their patients in the past week, the National Pharmacy Association
said Friday.
Pharmacies said they have been rationing supplies, prioritizing patients with
the most acute heart conditions or in need of emergency prescriptions, with
several saying they stopped selling the medication over the counter.
Olivier Picard, chair of the NPA, said the association is “concerned” about
these reports and its implications on patients; 51 million aspirin items were
prescribed in the U.K. between January and October last year.
“For those pharmacies that can get hold of supply, costs will far exceed what
they will be reimbursed by the [National Health Service], yet more signs of a
fundamentally broken pharmacy contract in desperate need of reform by the
government,” Picard said.
Earlier this month, U.S. President Donald Trump made headlines for saying he
takes a high daily dose of aspirin as it’s “good for thinning out the blood, and
I don’t want thick blood pouring through my heart.”
He reportedly takes four times the recommended daily dose for cardiovascular
disease prevention. On Thursday, Trump blamed the medication for his visible
hand bruise at Davos.
In the U.K., pharmacists cannot offer patients substitutions for a prescribed
medication, such as a different strength or formulation, without a new doctor’s
prescription. The government is looking into the possibility of changing this.
“We’ve long called for pharmacists to be able to make substitutions where a
medicine is not in stock and it is safe to supply an alternative,” he said. “The
status quo is not only frustrating for patients, it is also dangerous.”
The government added aspirin to its export ban list on Jan. 16 amid the ongoing
shortage.
In the EU, the Pharmaceutical Group of the European Union said Friday they
“don’t have any signal regarding shortages of aspirin in the EU.” The European
Medicines Agency, which monitors drugs in short supply, does not currently list
aspirin.
Tag - Pharmacies and pharmacists
Fake weight-loss drugs are increasingly being advertised and sold across the EU,
posing a serious public health threat, the bloc’s drugs regulator warned today.
The European Medicines Agency said there has been a “sharp rise” in the number
of illegal medicines marketed and sold as GLP-1 agonists, such as the popular
semaglutide, liraglutide and tirzepatide, in recent months.
Authorities have identified hundreds of sham Facebook profiles, advertisements
and e-commerce listings promoting the fake drugs. These websites often mislead
customers by using official logos and false endorsements, the EMA said.
While genuine versions under the brand names Wegovy, Ozempic, Saxenda and
Mounjaro are available through legitimate health services and with a
prescription, the fake versions are “not authorised and do not meet necessary
standards of quality, safety and efficacy,” the agency said.
“Such illegal products pose a serious risk to public health. They may not
contain the claimed active substance at all and may contain harmful levels of
other substances,” the EMA warned.
“People who use these products are therefore at a very high risk of treatment
failure, unexpected and serious health problems and dangerous interactions with
other medicines.”