Pharmacy shouldn’t ‘bury its head in the sand’ about Amazon threat
Government and community pharmacy shouldn’t “bury its head in the sand" when it comes to the threat from online pharmacies, former health minister Steve Brine has said.
Highlighting Amazon’s recent filing for a pharmacy trademark, Mr Brine said both Amazon and Pharmacy2U will “continue to exist”. It would be a “massive mistake of Blockbuster video proportions to pretend it ain’t so”, he added, speaking to the annual Sigma conference in Cebu, the Philippines on Monday (February 17).
Online retail giant Amazon submitted an application to trademark Amazon Pharmacy in the UK last month.
Those working in pharmacy and the wider NHS must recognise that they are operating in an environment where “money is not unlimited”, Mr Brine added, commenting on the current situation for the sector.
He stressed the importance of working in “partnership across primary care” and taking a coordinated approach to healthcare.
“Nuclear weapon” against community pharmacy
Appearing in a livestreamed video alongside Pharmaceutical Services Negotiating Committee chief executive Simon Dukes, the former pharmacy minster discussed the five-year funding deal and the future of community pharmacy.
Mr Brine also addressed the 2016 funding cuts, expressing that he was “disappointed” in what happened, and that he saw the cuts as “a nuclear weapon at the very heart of community pharmacy”.
Controversial comments made on an episode of ITV’s This Morning that branded pharmacists “pretend doctors” are “ignorant nonsense”, Mr Brine said.
“We have to keep making the point about what you can do and that pharmacists are talented health professionals in their own right,” he added.
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Do you feel threatened by Amazon Pharmacy and Pharmacy2U?