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Tories attack ministers over NHS drugs deal |
The Conservatives last night accused the government of "dreadful incompetence" after health ministers admitted letting pharmacists make £811m in excess profits dispensing NHS prescriptions.
| Andrew Lansley, the shadow health secretary, said parliamentary answers showed pharmacists in England exceeded an agreed maximum profit by 60% in 2005-6 and 102% in 2006-7. The contract, introduced two years ago, was hailed by the government as a breakthrough for patients and a cost-saving measure for taxpayers.
|  Tory Ian Duncan Smith calls government incompetent
| | Pharmacists agreed to provide extra services, including management of repeat prescriptions to help patients avoid unnecessary trips to the GP and more advice to improve customers' health, and accepted a cap on profits from dispensing drugs - reducing their take from £800m to £500m a year. |
Lansley said few pharmacies had delivered the extra services and the companies controlling them had ignored the profit cap. A parliamentary answer showed the excess profit was £300m in 2005-6 and £511m in 2006-7.
"Alan Johnson has been complaining about a lack of generic prescribing [allowing GPs to specify branded drugs] costing the NHS £200m. But his department paid out £811m too much to pharmacy contractors ... This is another dreadful example of incompetence and waste."
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