News Daily: Medicines shortage, Prince Philip crash and Bercow peerage

  • 2019-01-18 18:46:48
  'Unconscious' stockpilingMany common medicines are becoming hard to get hold of, leaving patients complaining of delays. Widely-used painkillers, anti-depressants and blood pressure drugs are among 80 on the "shortage of supply" list for England - up from 45 in October - and pharmacists say they're having to pay "vastly increased" prices for them. Some are sending patients back to their GPs to ask for a different medicine or dosage - others are giving patients some of their prescription and sending them away with an IOU note for the rest. Why is this happening? Well, factors include increased global demand, pricier raw materials and new regulatory requirements driving up prices. But Brexit also appears to be making things worse. The government has told drug manufacturers to stockpile six weeks' worth of supplies in case of a no-deal scenario. Hospitals, distributors and patients have been told not to stockpile, but those in the know say that some inevitably will be - even "unconsciously" - holding onto a bit extra... just in case. Drug manufacturers prefer to call it a "tightening of supply" rather than a shortage, and say such fluctuations are "normal". The government is stressing that most medicines are unaffected. Royal crash Prince Philip is recovering after being involved in a car crashclose to the Queen's Sandringham estate. The duke, who's 97, was behind the wheel when the collision happened on the A149. He was unhurt, but one witness described him as "very, very shocked and shaken". Two women in the other vehicle suffered minor injuries. The BBC's Jonny Dymond says there'll be some surprise that the elderly duke still drives himself on public roads, but he has always been fiercely independent. Perhaps, though, our royal correspondent adds, that might be about to change. Incidentally, the speed limit on the stretch of road where the crash happened is expected to be reduced from 60mph to 50mph at a council meeting later. Norfolk County Council was already due to discuss safety issues before the royal incident. Bercow snub?It's a tradition dating back 230 years that Commons Speakers are automatically given a peerage when they retire. However, our political correspondent Chris Mason has been told that such is the anger among senior levels of government at John Bercow's handling of Brexit, his move to the Lords could be blocked. A cabinet source said: "I can't imagine we would look favourably on those who've cheated centuries of procedure." Mr Bercow has faced accusations that he is not impartial, given he voted Remain, and earlier this month, plenty within government furiously claimed he broke precedent to unfairly help those opposed to Theresa May's Brexit deal. AFP.

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