Friday 11 March 2016

Removing Dependency, Bit By Painful Bit…

Gluten-free food prescriptions could soon be axed. Two south Essex clinical commissioning groups (CCGs) have now launched a consultation on the issue.
There are currently around 700 coeliac patients receiving prescribed food in the Southend, Castle Point and Rochford areas, but cutting the service could save the CCGs about £180,000 a year.
Always a bugbear of the gone but not forgotten NHS Blog Doctor (who’d be in hot water these days if he was still blogging, after the treatment meted out to other tell-it-like-it-is social media commenters like Dr Christian Solomonides).
The CCG today launched a 20-day consultation, with responses invited from all members of the public, not just those affected by wheat-intolerances.
Simon Williams, head of medicine management at Southend CCG, said: “We are looking to review everything we spend our money on and this is one of the areas we are considering.
“Across the patch we spend £180,000 a year on the prescription food such as bread, pizza bases, pasta, biscuits and cake mixes.
“We might stop all prescriptions but we want to stress that this is only a consultation at this stage.
Others have stopped already, in north Essex they are restricted quite severely and in mid Essex they have just recommended stopping all prescriptions, so the issue is in the spotlight across the county and we have decided to see where we go with it.”
This is one of the leftover things that made some sense when started, but no longer. Not with the easy availability of gluten-free food in every supermarket.
The CCG claims, were they to stop prescriptions, that the decision would be fair due to them not offering prescription food for other patients requiring a specific diet, such as diabetics.
Good point! They are simply told to avoid foods with sugar. The idea that an otherwise-healthy patient should be trotting along to the GP to renew a prescription for cakes and biscuits would boggle the mind…

There are other benefits too:
The commissioner also feels that removing the paperwork for GPs, who have to sign off a patients’ weekly prescription of gluten-free food, will free up time for other duties.
One can only hope they don’t fill that extra time with yet more pointless NHS stats gathering. Who knows, they might be able to see an extra patient or two?

The consultation project knows they will be in for a rough ride:
Mr Williams added: “We do not believe it will have a detrimental effect on patients’ health.
“We started doing this around 30 years ago when there was little or no alternative in the supermarket, but nowadays every big shop has an aisle of gluten free.
“The NHS spends about £25million a year on prescribing gluten-free food so if that stops then hopefully it will improve the market for people in supermarkets because they will be fighting to get a bit of that £25million.”
Are coeliacs happy to accept this thoroughly reasonable change? Well, not the ones giving interviews!
A coeliac sufferer has condemned the Clinical Commissioning Groups’ decision to potentially scrap prescription food.
Sue Hems, 50, of Rock It Inflatables, in Lascelles Gardens, Rochford, was diagnosed eight years ago and has found it hard to adjust to a gluten free lifestyle.
In 2011, when she owned Rockit Pizza and Grill, in Rayleigh, she introduced gluten free pizzas to the menu and said the move was welcomed by fellow coeliacs.
She said: “I do not agree with them doing away with prescriptions.
“It is easy enough to get hold of gluten free food in the supermarket now, but it is the cost that is prohibitive, having it available on prescription certainly helps.
“It has been hard to adapt but I can get by, but it is expensive being gluten free.
“It is wishful thinking from the CCGs if they think them cancelling prescriptions will bring supermarket prices down – it is just a cost cutting measure for the NHS.
“There is not enough of a demand for it in the supermarkets so their prices will stay high.
“Restaurants are starting to bring in gluten free menus now at similar prices and that’s great, but supermarkets just don’t bring their prices down.”
Expect impassioned ‘Taking the gluten-free bread out of people’s mouths!!’ articles in the ‘Indy’ and ‘Guardian’ in the next few months…

6 comments:

Anonymous said...

I had no idea that such a prescription was available. Outrageous that the NHS does this. Just one of many things that should be cut along with treating the entire bloody world for free.

Anonymous said...

You don't need bread, pasta, pizza, cake, biscuits; you're healthier with fewer carbs in your diet; maybe coeliacs should try adapting their diets rather thanthe ghastly glutenfree ersatz crap bread, crap pasta, crap pizza, crap cake, crap biscuits they think they're entitled to.

Anonymous said...

I have been Coeliac since August 2015. I knew about the prescriptions but did not take them up. I have found it really easy to adjust my diet and although it can be hit and miss eating out, with a little planning it doesn't make a scrap of difference. My personal feeling is that with so many seriously ill patients needing care and treatment that is ONLY available via the NHS, it is just plain daft to pay out for food items easily available in the shops. As for the cost of Gluten Free foods...I shop around, as I do for the rest of our grocery shopping.
There is some fantastic food out there, at great prices, if you look for it.
There is also some utterly awful, overpriced crap, but the trick is not to buy it.

Flaxen Saxon said...

I have an intolerance to cheap wine. I'm off to the GP tomorrow.

Anonymous said...

Flaxie,
Ask your GP if Tanquery gin is included, please?
Penseivat

JuliaM said...

"...maybe coeliacs should try adapting their diets rather thanthe ghastly glutenfree ersatz crap bread, crap pasta, crap pizza, crap cake, crap biscuits they think they're entitled to."

It's not like it even tastes like bread!

"There is some fantastic food out there, at great prices, if you look for it.
There is also some utterly awful, overpriced crap, but the trick is not to buy it."


But that requires effort and personal judgement. Something that's sadly not so common any more...

"I have an intolerance to cheap wine. I'm off to the GP tomorrow."

It's your RIGHT to get Mouton Rothschild on prescription. Innit? ;)