National scheme to offer emergency hormonal contraception in pharmacies will cut GP workload, say researchers

Offering free emergency hormonal contraception (EHC) without prescription from all pharmacies in England could reduce GPs’ workload and improve access for patients, say researchers.Currently, some community pharmacies in England are commissioned by local authorities to provide EHC free without prescription to women aged 12-55. But researchers from Keele University noted that fewer than half of local authorities in England had a service in place, and those that did sometimes commissioned the service only from a handful of pharmacies in each area.Their study, published in BMJ Open,1 used routinely recorded data to examine the effect of localised policies on prescribing trends and to assess how extending it to the whole of England could affect this. They concluded that areas where the scheme was well established had seen “a significant influence” on GP prescribing of EHC and that rolling it out nationally through the NHS “should have a marked impact on GP…
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