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MHRA opens up for more medicines to become available without a GP prescription

MHRA opens up for more medicines to become available without a GP prescription

More medicines could be switched from prescription-only medicines (POM) to pharmacy medicines (P), as the Medicines and Healthcare Products Regulatory Agency (MHRA) has encouraged medicines manufacturers to apply for product reclassification.

Specifically, it has asked for applications regarding medicines that treat women’s health, short-term sleep issues, allergies, pain, skin problems, digestive disorders and oral health.

These categories were identified as areas where more over-the-counter (OTC) medicines could be beneficial for patients, the MHRA said.

The conditions and medicine categories were chosen by the ‘Reclassification Alliance’, led by the MHRA and OTC manufacturer representative group PAGB.

The group involves representatives from the government, NHS, clinicians, pharmacists, and industry.

The list was also scrutinised by chief pharmacists, the MHRA said.

It added that moving more medicines from POM to P would give pharmacists the tools they need to support patients in self-care for common conditions, as well as give patients greater access to medicines without the need to visit their GP.

The Royal Pharmaceutical Society (RPS) has welcomed the news. 

RPS president Professor Claire Anderson said enabling POM to P switches ‘ensures the public get the treatment they need from community pharmacies’, and reduces demand on GPs and A&E.

‘Diagnosing and discussing health problems with patients and advising on the benefits and risks of treatment options are integral to the role of the pharmacy team,’ she added.

And she said the RPS would ‘work closely with the MHRA and manufacturers to provide guidance ensuring what is provided to the public continues to be safe and appropriate for their condition’.

A 2023 report by Frontier Economics, commissioned by PAGB, suggested that switching more medicines from POM to P could save the NHS £1.4bn a year.

Last month, the Government rejected a call to make over-the-counter (OTC) medicines free of charge to reduce pressure on GPs. 

Which health conditions and medicine categories have been identified as suitable for reclassification?

The full list of conditions and medicine categories suitable for reclassification are:

Conditions

  • Short term sleep aids
  • Oral health
  • Pain management (migraine, osteoarthritis, pain relief /joint pain)
  • Allergic rhinitis
  • Skin (acne, eczema, psoriasis)
  • Conditions that affect women’s health

Indications

Gastro:

  • Heartburn
  • Preventative indigestion
  • Stomach protection

Skin:

  • Acne
  • Actinic Keratoses
  • Eczema
  • Psoriasis

Women’s Health:

  • Heavy periods / Menorrhagia
  • Intimate fungal skin infections
  • UTI (non-antibiotic treatment)

Are there any exceptions to the list?

The MHRA will not consider any applications for medicines that include opioids or antibiotics.

A version of this article was first published by Pulse’s sister title The Pharmacist


          

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READERS' COMMENTS [2]

Please note, only GPs are permitted to add comments to articles

Krishna Malladi 11 February, 2025 6:01 pm

Actinic keratosis is on the list. Really? Is that suitable for pharmacy diagnosis?

David Church 11 February, 2025 7:21 pm

So Pharmacies will be providing all women with detailed explanations of the UK Contraceptive choices guidelines, managing cases of Benzo and Z-drug addiction brought about by increased availability OTC of addictive hypnotics, and similarly managing heroin addiction they cause by use of opioid analgesia.
Far more likely they will follow the CMHTs’ example, and just cultivate addiction and then send them to the GP when they get too difficult.