The Malta Independent 26 April 2024, Friday
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Pharmacists blame media for ‘contributing to increase pressure’ on medicine shortage

Thursday, 12 January 2023, 11:55 Last update: about 2 years ago

The Chamber of Pharmacists is blaming the media for increasing pressure when it reports on the shortage of medicine products.

In a statement, the chamber said the media should be playing a very important role in factually informing the public without unnecessary sensationalism, as caused by naming and listing products, which causes gratuitous panic and pressure on pharmacists and prescribers.

Medicinal products, whether originators or generics, are received by wholesale dealers, in varying amounts, and, in the present circumstances, the Kamra and pharmacists expect that these are equitably distributed immediately to community pharmacies; the real situation is that they are quickly depleted off the pharmacy shelves.

The media too may be contributing to increasing the pressure, in the Kamra’s opinion.

The underlying maxim remains that of getting the right medicine to the patient needing it at the right time.

It is a moot point by now to state that Malta is not alone in Europe to feel the effect of the multivariate reasons resulting in shortages of certain medicines not least antibiotics. These can be summarized as follows:

- Lack of supply of raw materials by primarily India and China to the international Pharma industry to produce the Active Pharmaceutical Ingredients (APIs) and other manufacturing problems.

- Issues with logistics in transport to manufacturers and importers/wholesale dealers.

- These issues have been compounded by Covid-19 pandemic, since 2020, and more generally in Europe, by the Ukraine War early last year, further causing shortages and increasing demand in other countries.

- Brexit has affected UK products; the UK has itself suffered shortages so, as other countries, it is not exporting. Moreover, Brexit has resulted in unviable pricing and bureaucratic 3rd country shipping costs.

- Following the downtrend in flu and colds during the Covid-19 precautionary practices, there has been a surge since September 2022, increasing demand of antibiotics, though these are ineffective in viral conditions, and cold and cough remedies; this development has skewed available stocks and forecasts.

The Kamra reiterated that the role of primary healthcare professionals, Pharmacists and Doctors, and the Health Authorities, is to support, guide and educate the public on the correct use of any available antibiotics.

The media, the chamber said, should be playing a very important role in factually informing the public without unnecessary sensationalism, as caused by naming and listing products, which causes gratuitous panic and pressure on pharmacists and prescribers.

 

Editorial note: The media, as is its duty, has been reporting extensively about the shortage of medicinal products, some of which form part of the list of free medicines made available by the government. We are certainly not to be blamed for any shortage, as we do not produce, and neither import medicines. It is our duty to inform the public that they might not find the medicine they require when they go to the pharmacy. Ironically, the chamber then goes on to list several factors that are leading to the current shortage, quashing its own argument that the media should take the blame.

 

 

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