Swine flu drug hand-out concerns

About Health –



























Accessibility links

Swine flu drug hand-out service raises concerns

Page last updated at 23:05 GMT, Sunday, 4 July 2010 00:05 UK

Man sneezing Swine flu was the first pandemic for 40 years

Just 12% of patients who got anti-flu drugs using the swine flu hotline and website actually had the virus, figures obtained by the BBC suggest.

More than 1.1m people collected the drugs – which can cause side effects such as nausea – after being diagnosed by the National Pandemic Flu Service.

But figures obtained under a freedom of information request show that of 16,560 people swabbed, 1,932 tested positive.

The Patients Association said this raised questions about the system used.

The flu service was launched last July at the height of the pandemic. It was the first time that prescription drugs had been handed out en masse by the NHS without a patient having to consult a doctor.

Instead, people who felt ill were put through an electronic check-list. Those with swine flu symptoms were then given a voucher number to collect anti-viral drugs, which were used to relieve the illness.

The drugs – Relenza and Tamiflu – both caused a number of side-effects, including nausea and, in some cases, vomiting.

Continue reading the main story

It is always easy to say in hindsight, but we really do need to review this

Katherine Murphy
Patients Association

Concerns were also voiced that over-use could have led to resistance – many other countries used them much more sparingly.

There was also a debate about how effective the drugs were.

The independent review of the flu strategy, which was published last week, called for a full evaluation of the flu service, admitting it was a controversial issue.

It cost £13.5m to set it up, although the bill for running it until it closed in February this year has never been published because of commercial sensitivity.

Katherine Murphy, of the Patients Association, said the findings suggested the government had "over-reacted".

"It is always easy to say in hindsight, but we really do need to review this. It is a low number and we have to bear this in mind when thinking about pandemic planning."

Dr Richard Vautrey, of the British Medical Association's GPs committee, agreed "lessons must be learned".

But he added: "It must be remembered the service played a valuable role relieving the pressure on the health service."

Shadow health secretary Andrew Lansley said he was looking to change the funding system to tackle the issue.

He added: "Unnecessary emergency admissions create a burden on the NHS. We know that what matters most to patients is the outcome they get and their experience of the NHS – not simply how quickly they are seen."

Bookmark with

  • Delicious

  • Digg

  • reddit

  • StumbleUpon

What are these?

Print Sponsor


SWINE FLU PANDEMIC

KEY STORIES

  • Swine flu jab contracts ‘flawed’

  • Flu experts ‘link’ to drug firms

  • WHO to review swine flu response

FEATURES AND ANALYSIS

  • How the virus emerged and how its spread can be prevented

  • Fergus On Flu

  • Did UK get it right?

  • Q&A: Swine flu vaccination

  • How to make a swine flu vaccine

  • Can masks help stop flu spread?

VIDEO AND AUDIO

HAVE YOUR SAY

  • Swine flu: Your experiences

Related links

  • Related BBC links

  • Related internet links

    The BBC is not responsible for the content of external internet sites

[an error occurred while processing this directive]

Skip to top

Products & services

  • E-mail news
  • Mobiles
  • Alerts
  • News feeds
  • Podcasts

Skip to the top of the page



bbc.co.uk navigation

  • News
  • Sport
  • Weather
  • TV
  • Radio
  • More…

BBC © MMX

The BBC is not responsible for the content of external sites. Read more.

This page is best viewed in an up-to-date web browser with style sheets (CSS) enabled. While you will be able to view the content of this page in your current browser, you will not be able to get the full visual experience. Please consider upgrading your browser software or enabling style sheets (CSS) if you are able to do so.







Quantcast






TOP NEWS FRONT PAGE STORIES

  • Police ‘told’ of gunman’s threat

  • Strike warning over redundancies

  • Ancient cosmic light is revealed


Leave a comment

Your comment