brutal cuts ...
5,000 jobs isn't a threat, its an unavoidable conclusion.
You need to get out more.No, I don't.
Thanks for the explanation, which is more than I got from my pharmacy, despite me being quite vocal and irritating. How does your OTC price compare to the US OTC price? Is Ireland the only country to go prescription only for aspirin?Hi complainer. As a pharmacist, I used to sell aspirin 75mg over the counter without a prescription, which is cheaper (currently!) than dispensing it. However, the Irish Medicines Board (not to be messed with!) changed the regulations to make this illegal, and it can now only be bought with a prescription. The reason for this is that anyone who takes this medicine is on it to reduce their platelet count, i.e. thin their blood in order to reduce the possibility of clots occurring which could lead to strokes, heart attacks, deep vein thromboses etcetera. The 75mg dose isn't strong enough for pain relief, and is also coated to reduce potential stomach upset. Therefore, the logic is - anyone who is on this seemingly simple and old-fashioned medication should be on it for a very good reason and not just because they feel like it. Therefore, the IMB feel it should only be dispensed on prescription in to encourage patients who use it to get a check-up from their GP or cardiologist or whoever (in real life - not online!) every 6 months.
If, however somebody comes into my shop and is vocal and irritating enough about the price of the aspirin - I'll sell it to them for a quiet life. They are adults after all - and I'll explain the logic of not selling it without prescription - but they probably won't listen.
Many people are on ongoing prescriptions. I'll probably be on medication for blood pressure for the rest of my life, so I have lots of time to shop around.Good question it's something that i have never even thought about. I suppose if your ill and need medicine you just go to the nearest place.
Any data to back this up? It would be interesting to see the split of revenue and profit between the prescription business and the OTC business for pharmacies. And the number currently employed in pharmacies. And the profitability level of pharmacies. Do you believe that pharmacies aren't outrageously profitable?You probably read about the brutal cuts being imposed too then:The following are the precise measures the Minister has decided:
- (a) re-balance the amounts paid in respect of, on the one hand, the GMS and, on the other hand, the Drugs Payments Scheme, Long Term Illness Scheme and other community drugs schemes, by:
- (i) introducing a new higher dispensing fee structure for the schemes based on a sliding scale as follows: €5 for first 20,000 items, €4.50 for next 10,000 items and €3.50 for the remaining items; and
- (ii) reducing from 50% to 20% the retail mark-up payable under the community drugs schemes (no mark-up is payable under the GMS); In these two measures, the Minister is responding to concerns expressed by pharmacists that medical card dispensing is cross-subsidised by the retail mark-ups on the other schemes. This should benefit pharmacies with relatively more medical card patients, for example, those serving poorer areas.
- (b) end a special payment to pharmacists in relation to the automatic entitlement of persons over 70 to a medical card, as that entitlement has been ended; and
The measures will be given effect through Regulations to be issued by the Minister in due course. It is intended to implement them with effect from 1 July.
- (c) reduce the ‘wholesale mark-up’ reimbursement price paid for delivery of drugs to community pharmacies, from 17.66% to 10%. This mark-up was intended to pay for wholesale distribution costs but it is almost double the European average for this type of service. Approximately half of this mark-up is being passed back by wholesalers to pharmacists by way of discounts.
5,000 jobs isn't a threat, its an unavoidable conclusion.
You need to get out more.
Thanks for the explanation, which is more than I got from my pharmacy, despite me being quite vocal and irritating.
How does your OTC price compare to the US OTC price? Is Ireland the only country to go prescription only for aspirin?
Many people are on ongoing prescriptions. I'll probably be on medication for blood pressure for the rest of my life, so I have lots of time to shop around.
Any data to back this up? It would be interesting to see the split of revenue and profit between the prescription business and the OTC business for pharmacies. And the number currently employed in pharmacies. And the profitability level of pharmacies. Do you believe that pharmacies aren't outrageously profitable?
Show me the massive profits! There's massive money involved OK, not a lot of it is profit - its mostly debt - secured on a government contract that they're now changing the law in order to renege on it.Why should the state pay enormous sums and make massive subventions to enable a small coterie of people make massive profits?
Because the government has been weak, and the pharmaceutical lobby has been strong. Fostering internal competition will strengthen the country and save people money. The over-emotive guff from the pharmaceutical lobby should be resisted.
Labelling cuts in a GUARANTEED 50% mark-up as brutal is quite frankly bizarre! Why should there be any guaranteed mark-up?
Are you ignoring the OTC business in these comparisons - 36% of the prescriptions, but not 36% overall - right?The magnitude of the drop in income is absolutely brutal. The 50% mark-up (33% margin) only applies to the DPS part of the prescription business - roughly 70% of my business is GMS (medical card) which has a guaranteed 0% mark-up (0% margin). I haven't worked out yet what 20% mark-up is in margin terms. The average pharmacy will see a drop of 36% in their income from these cuts.Thats one hell of a haircut by any standards! Every other health professional and legal professional had their fees cut by 8%. Harney has a massive chip on her shoulder about pharmacy.She tried to implement similar cuts last year and she lost the battle in court. Now she's had the law changed to kill the profession.
Are you ignoring the OTC business in these comparisons - 36% of the prescriptions, but not 36% overall - right?
I can tell you from looking at my figures yesterday that the OTC section of my business has dropped 20% year on year. Big deal, whose hasn't you might say. Anyway, at those figures, my front of counter business is losing me money as we speak.
But you do know of someone in your circle of family and friends travelling over the next six months?
No, I don't.
You need to get out more.
As only 1/3 of the pop have a med card, how can med card trade be 70% of business?
Mary Harney makes a good point:
“Put simply, it should not cost €640 million to get €1.04 billion of drugs from the factory gate to the patient,” she said.
Apart from myself, i dont know anyone else that is going away either.
Do i need to get out more aswell??
So you're OK with 5000 job losses then? And roughly 300 pharmacy closures? Even the ones that don't go wallop will cause even more trouble for the banks.
Your argument is economic nonsense.
It won't come to that. De-regulation and competition should benefit the wider society in the end. If there are a few temporary job losses then so be it. The more efficient pharmacists will flourish and provide cheaper and better services for the public and create employment. It isn't as if pharmacies are major exporters from Ireland. People will still get sick and need pharmacies so this kind of apocalyptic vision is being provided to justify unfair restriction of competition.
See this interesting EU internal market study.
[broken link removed]
The summary findings would support de-regulation.
In short lets de-regulate and see how it goes. Why should we pay to protect pharmacies when the export sector is suffering so much? It makes more sense to support export-led businesses than pharmacists.
This country should develop an aggressive internal market for services.
Irish pharmacy has been deregulated for years
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