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Why is it so hard to get medication?

69 replies

elliejjtiny · 05/04/2025 22:26

You used to be able to phone the surgery and then pick up your prescription 48 hours later.

Now I have to go in person to order them. Dh's meds take a week and he gets a text when they are ready. I chase ds4's meds up and after being caller 11 in the queue at the Dr surgery I find out the prescription went to the pharmacy over a week ago. So I try and phone the pharmacy but they don't answer at all, ever. If I go into the pharmacy there will be queuing out the door and it will take at least 30 minutes to get to the front so I really don't want to do that twice and Ds4 now has 1 dose left. I am fed up with having to do this every month. To add to it all I've got Ds4 post operation who is on loads of paracetamol and ibuprofen so we keep running out of that as well and ds5 is autistic and still struggling with the fact that I was in hospital with his brother last week.

OP posts:
kittensinthekitchen · 06/04/2025 04:13

@Vallmo47

When a customer has paracetamol capsules, that’s 224 capsules sometimes for one single weekly box.

32 paracetamol a day???

And yes, your day sounds stressful, but it seems your anger should be directed at whoever is responsible for staffing, rather than the customers. I hate this recent increase in attitude in customer-facing roles that customers are an inconvenience.

Rubyupbeat · 06/04/2025 04:24

I am very fortunate then.
I order on the gp website and my pharmacy will text when they are ready, which is within 24hours.
I live in a very built up area and the pharmacy feeds from 2 surgeries.

Dutchhouse14 · 06/04/2025 04:42

OMG yes!!
Used to go to GP (when you used to be able actually get an appt!!)
Walk out with paper prescription and go to pharmacy and get prescription all in one outing on the same day mind blowing.
Now my GP sends it electronically to the pharmacy but apparently it take 2hours to arrive and then they need 3 days to dispense it!!!
For repeat prescriptions (can only be requested online) GP surgery need 3 working days and Pharmacy needs another 3 working days so it's over a week and then they often don't have all of it.
CAMHS wins though as they need 21 days notice for a prescription which you have to collect in person, 30 min drive, before taking it to a pharmacy.
And if you try and order it a month in advance, ie when just opening last box they say its too early to order it
Not good if you have ADHD😂

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Missey85 · 06/04/2025 04:45

It's because of all the pill poppers 😊 here on Australia you have to show photo I'd just to get hayfever tablets

Thunderpants88 · 06/04/2025 04:50

RosesAndHellebores · 05/04/2025 22:58

NHS App. A request is usually approved within 24 hours, the nominated pharmacy texts about 24 hours later. It's really efficient.

I have two beefs. Firstly the plastic sealed bag which is far from environmentally friendly, secondly 56 day prescribing. I have an underactive thyroid and the dose hasn't changed for years. Initially for the first 15 years it was one prescription, once a year. Less time and bureaucracy for the Dr and me. It's as cheap as chips and 56 day prescribing for something so cheap is a waste of NHS and MY time

it is so if you die, or stop needing it it isn’t wasted as it cannot be returned.

mindutopia · 06/04/2025 08:11

Lloyd’s Pharmacy Direct. I’m sure other online community pharmacies are similar. Life-changing. I just log in, order it, the surgery approves within 24 hours, you pay (if you pay) and it’s off in the post to you and arrives within 48 hours. I’d say the whole thing takes 3-4 days, but it’s super easy. No chasing anyone. It just arrives by Royal Mail. It’s made such a difference. My closest surgery is 20 minutes away so no way I’m driving back and forth there chasing prescriptions.

faerietales · 06/04/2025 08:12

I just order mine on the NHS app and collect it from
Boots when it’s ready, normally within 24h but maximum 48h.

I have three medications on prescription and it’s very very straightforward.

Allnamechange · 06/04/2025 08:29

The system works well for me until the point I collect the prescription. The pharmacy put prescriptions in rows of boxes. It seems random as it can take 10 mins or more just to find the one with my medication in it. Same with everyone else in the queue. It’s an independent and this is when I’ve had the text that they are ready.

I can’t use online pharmacy as I’m in a block of flats and out at work so no where secure for them to go.

taxguru · 06/04/2025 08:40

My OH has a similar nightmare every sodding month to get his chemotherapy prescription. It's worse because he also has to factor in a blood test, and the drugs are controlled so need to have two levels of authorisation before the pharmacy will release them. It's been the same for five years he's been on the treatment regime, but it's a sodding nightmare as none of the different depts involved will get their act together. He has to make several phone calls every month to get it sorted out and sometimes, even after doing all that and being assured it's ready for collection at the hospital pharmacy, he gets there to be told the authorisation hasn't been done! That's after phoning the pharmacy who'd said it had been done, phoning oncology dept to be told it had been done, etc. They all just blame each other. And all that's after he's had to jump through hoops to get the blood test as it's a special test that the oncology dept have to perform (they won't authorise the phlebotomy dept to do a blood test), and that's another appointment that's sodding hard to make as it has to be just the right number of days before the medication is authorised and they keep making appointments too early or too late. The whole NHS is a complete shambles.

Laszlomydarling · 06/04/2025 08:45

Pharmacy2u is the answer to your pharmacy problems. A few clicks online and delivered to your door. Been using them for about 3 years after similar problems. Never had a delay, never been out of stock. Fantastic service.

Vallmo47 · 06/04/2025 08:46

@kittensinthekitchen You’re absolutely right, you could tell I was writing that in the middle of the night where maths shouldn’t happen. 224 capsules is for the entire month. I’m usually quite good at my 28 times table by now, but not at 3am clearly. I’m definitely not angry with the customers, I empathise with them daily as long as they are polite to me. But it’s the amount of people who point fingers at me personally and shout in my face, that’s where I draw the line. When I first started working I used to go home and cry, I was so genuinely worried for the well being of some patients. I still get very upset when end of life medication is prescribed to someone I have good report with. You’re right I am quite upset with the systems though and I truly wish more people understood that they’re not the only one to call to request their meds. I want to do my job which is to prepare your medications in a timely manner, instead I am accused of doing nothing because my time has to be used to answer request calls. Of course I want pharmacies and the NHS to thrive, it’s a subject very close to my heart. I care about people or I’d never stay in this job for minimum wage. People are just not very nice to us overall so it does harden you as a person. We do understand that people who come in are sometimes in a lot of pain and that they therefore take it out on us. But we are never allowed to step away or refuse to serve because everyone has a right to receive their medication. In other jobs customers who were outright nasty would be shown the door. That is upsetting, that I am treated badly while working exceptionally hard.

Vinorosso74 · 06/04/2025 08:47

I find it all very straightforward! My pharmacy put the request to the GP every 2 months for my tablets. I do have an injection every 12 weeks which I request via the NHS app. It's usually approved within 24 hours and is always ready to collect.
I find the local pharmacy I use very helpful and efficient. This is in contrast to Boots, who I used for DD's eczema creams when she was younger. They never had the items in stock and took forever to get the prescription fulfilled with no explanation as to why!

GETTINGLIKEMYMOTHER · 06/04/2025 08:48

We order via NHS app, collect a few days later. Very easy and straightforward.
Any occasional one-offs, e.g. ABs, GP sends prescription direct to pharmacy and we pick up later that day.

Mielikki · 06/04/2025 08:50

I order on the NHS app, get a text at most 24 hours later (sometimes same day) and go and pick up from the dispensary at the surgery.

madnessitellyou · 06/04/2025 08:53

annonymousse · 06/04/2025 02:10

I use pharmacy2U. They email me to remind me to order. I click a few buttons then receive a confirmation email and the meds plop through my letterbox a few days later. I don't know how it works if you have to pay for your prescription but as I'm on levothyroxine I'm exempt so it's very simple

I use Pharmacy2U and pay for my prescriptions - they took card details when I set up my account. I get a message to tell me to update payment details from time to time.

Pharmacy2U has never let me down. It’s really worth having a look at.

Keepingthingsinteresting · 06/04/2025 09:15

PleaseDontFingerMyPouffe · 05/04/2025 22:31

That's a nightmare!

I have my frustrations but it works reasonably well, especially by comparison! We fill in repeat prescription requests via online form on GP website, pharmacy texts me when prescription is ready to collect. If for whatever reason the GP can't or won't write the prescription, then they'll call me and offer an appointment to discuss.

Whereabouts in the UK are you? I know the NHS doesn't routinely prescribe otc painkillers now but if you're using them in amounts that make it cheaper to get the on prescription that otc they're usually OK to write a script (appreciate not helpful if you can't get into pharmacy!)

I bought 72 paracetamol tablets for less than £2 yesterday so a script for OTC pain killers is definitely not appropriate. Get them at the pharmacy and explain why you want them and it’s fine.

RosesAndHellebores · 06/04/2025 09:16

@Vallmo47 golly!

Noting though that in my village we had a wonderful family owned pharmacist. They sold it to another family. The service used to be second to none, the new people are just rude and inefficient.

I changed to a small chain, principally because of their opening hours: 9am to 7pm Monday to Friday, 9am to 5.30pm Saturday, 10am to 4pm Sunday. They are in my local market town, a couple of miles away, but so are M&S and Waitrose. They are excellent and it's even better since I moved to an efficient GP practice - now that is a mind-blowing difference. I thought poor service was due to resources and GP's struggling. Nope just a badly run practice - this is probably duplicated throughout the land.

ThePinkPowerRangers · 06/04/2025 11:24

Your child can get added to your nhs app. DS is on mine.

DilemmaDelilah · 06/04/2025 11:35

Our experience is very good. DH and I go to different GP surgeries but use the same pharmacy, which is attached to my surgery. We both use the NHS app to request a repeat prescription. It is usually authorised within 24 hours, and our pharmacy lets us know when it's ready to collect, usually same day. If it's not available they will phone us to let us know and will usually already have rung round alternative pharmacies to see if they have any, and let us know that as well. For non-repeat prescriptions it depends on when the prescription is sent through to the pharmacy, I usually ask the doctor to do it while I am talking to them, and then it can be picked up the same day usually.

We do get an awful lot of prescriptions and it is a very small pharmacy, so now they greet my husband by name when he goes in and if he is seen in the queue and the prescription is ready they will quite often take the bag out to him before he even gets to the front of the queue.

Occasionally I will see people complaining about the pharmacy on Facebook but I always counter their comp!aints. In my opinion you can't get better service. I think it may be we live in a very NON multi-cultural area and the pharmacy is owned and run by people of a different ethnic origin. Sad.

saveforthat · 06/04/2025 11:37

Workoutrage · 05/04/2025 22:44

I go on the NHS app, order my prescriptions, see online when it’s been approved and then pick it up from the pharmacy a couple of days later. I can’t believe the hassle you have to go through!

Same.

frozendaisy · 06/04/2025 11:45

When out buying paracetamol you can go from shop to shop, pay in cash? So grab pks from Tesco, boots. B&m, home bargains, they don’t check your bag just only allowed x2 per transaction.

JockTamsonsBairns · 06/04/2025 11:54

Vallmo47 · 06/04/2025 03:13

OP, let me preface the below rant by saying that this is nothing personal against you, it sounds like your pharmacy is struggling and you deserve good service. Maybe try another pharmacy? Maybe the problem is the surgery you go to? Hope you find somewhere useful.

This is my experience working in a pharmacy- I love the job but it is utterly exhausting. Slaving away for minimum wage, sometimes taking 80 phone calls a day, all for simple requests or “just checking if GP approved my request…” GP keeps sending referrals across for things they don’t have time for/could be resolved in pharmacy, or they can’t be bothered to send referral at all (so we don’t get paid), just tell people to go to pharmacy. The surgery we are connected to won’t do requests full stop so also serve at least 50+ people a day who pop in “to request everything on their list, cheers”. Half the time they’re not even due their meds because they misplaced/miscalculated so we have to stand there and explain to them a few days later why it didn’t go through. Constant abuse from ppl angry with GP surgery for being slow/not answering/not diagnosing correctly/Gp prescribed wrong meds. Calmly standing there while being shouted at that if they don’t get their meds TODAY they will DIE.
People coming in “just to look the person in the eye who didn’t give my child their ADHD medication that’s out of stock and now the kid was suspended/treats me like shit”. People shouting at us for things being out of stock when the reason it’s out of stock is because of the Brexit they voted for.

If everyone ordered through the NHS app or sent a direct email to the surgery to request their medication. If everyone waited for our pharmacy to text when their prescription was ready for collection. If I didn’t have to answer the phone every 4 seconds, I’d have time to prepare your prescriptions.
And if surgeries everywhere stopped using our pharmacy for everything they consider themselves too important for, we’d have more time to help the people which is what we would love to do.

Pharmacies everywhere are closing, because people are using online services and/or shopping for meds while doing their weekly shop. People regularly come in for a free consultation with us and walk out empty handed to buy the medication elsewhere. I completely understand because we all have to look after our spendings, but we also have to make ends meet and we aren’t making money off prescribed items. We aren’t making money answering 80+ phone calls a day. And I cannot answer the phone call if I have a line out of the door, because we have to prioritise the people waiting in line. But some people are relentless, will ring off the hook for 15 minutes in order to “request some pain patches, cheers”.

As for why pharmacies are out of so much stock - we cannot afford to keep items on the shelves that aren’t regularly prescribed. We don’t get reimbursed for months after items have been prescribed. Sometimes one box of 30 tablets is around £90. One box for one patient. So yes, it takes time to get things ready. Surgeries are understaffed, GPs are busy. They’re slow to approve your prescriptions. Once they have, we then have to have free time to print, order and prepare your prescriptions. Sometimes it’s out of stock with our suppliers, so I have to shop around. But then the phone calls yet again and I have to stop what I’m doing to be shouted at for something out of my control. Then there’s a queue out the door, someone has ear ache, someone has cut their finger, someone wants to order “everything”, another is annoyed we haven’t called to notify them personally their medication is out of stock. I serve these people, apologise for delay, go back into dispensary, the phone calls… where was I?? Oh I needed to order X for Y and Z. Yelp, her comes the 8 delivery totes. Fridge and controlled drug items, need to put away urgently … need to sign for, need to call the surgery for Mr and Mrs X who have tried calling their surgery 3 times but can’t get through and now have so much pain they’re delirious.
Not to mention the amount of times a day I have to wait in the SAME phone queues to surgeries that customers do (because our surgery won’t allow us to use direct line anymore), because the GP was rushed off their feet and prescribed the wrong medication/wrong dose/an out of stock item. You are caller number 11 in the line, thanks for your patience, we will be with you as soon as we can….. 25 minutes later I’m in the same phone queue, dangling the phone in one hand while trying to dispense medication with another.
I’m using The same phone line customers are trying to call into, so a world of abuse next time customer comes in because “you never answer your phones!!!” I am TRYING….

I don’t really know what the solution is, but people are constantly angry with us for trying to do our jobs. I can only do so much in one day though. We prepare compliance aids for over 80 patients, sometimes popping 11 different meds into boxes by hand. When a customer has paracetamol capsules, that’s 224 capsules sometimes for one single weekly box. It hurts my hands like hell and is incredibly time consuming but it’s part of a free service we provide. And so are deliveries. We deliver for free and 7 times out of 10 the people we deliver to have popped out so we have to try again. And then we get abuse for refusing to do more than 3 delivery attempts. Um, if you aren’t even in, you should collect your own medication and free up the delivery space for people who genuinely need it.

As you can hear OP, it’s a bit of sore subject for me 🤣🤣 We try our best to help everyone where I work but we just don’t have enough time in the day.

On a side note, if you aren’t happy with your pharmacy, there are obviously other pharmacies in the area to try. People come in to threaten us with this quite regularly and all I think is “… We try our best, if it’s not good enough no need to announce your departure, just go on and go”. We can’t please everyone.

Yikes! That sounds utterly hellish.

I popped in to my local pharmacy yesterday, to ask if they would mind taking a look at a fairly nasty rash I've got behind my ears and round my hairline.

The pharmacist snarled at me, saying she didn't have time.
Now I understand why.

x2boys · 06/04/2025 12:01

elliejjtiny · 05/04/2025 22:26

You used to be able to phone the surgery and then pick up your prescription 48 hours later.

Now I have to go in person to order them. Dh's meds take a week and he gets a text when they are ready. I chase ds4's meds up and after being caller 11 in the queue at the Dr surgery I find out the prescription went to the pharmacy over a week ago. So I try and phone the pharmacy but they don't answer at all, ever. If I go into the pharmacy there will be queuing out the door and it will take at least 30 minutes to get to the front so I really don't want to do that twice and Ds4 now has 1 dose left. I am fed up with having to do this every month. To add to it all I've got Ds4 post operation who is on loads of paracetamol and ibuprofen so we keep running out of that as well and ds5 is autistic and still struggling with the fact that I was in hospital with his brother last week.

I have had similar issues with my sons insulin the named pharmacy is actually very good ,but the gp keeps cocking up an then lying i didnt order it time or only presctibing one item
And then not appearing to understsnd thst without insulin my son would die

abracadabra1980 · 06/04/2025 12:01

OMC that must be incredibly frustrating. I know it's regional but I just order online and they are delivered to me the next day. I very rarely have problems. In a medium town in the North. I think in your case I'd actually send a handwritten letter to the actual surgery. Good luck.

kittensinthekitchen · 06/04/2025 13:06

frozendaisy · 06/04/2025 11:45

When out buying paracetamol you can go from shop to shop, pay in cash? So grab pks from Tesco, boots. B&m, home bargains, they don’t check your bag just only allowed x2 per transaction.

Yes, because that sounds exactly what someone with chronic pain needs!!

Then, when they are an inpatient in hospital, I'm sure they'll be able to get their 8 required paracetamol a day, because all the have to do is tell the staff they usually get from Home Bargains. It's not like having it on prescription is a requirement at all!