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Inishowen pharmacies not replacing staff 01.04.08

Story by Damian Dowds, Inishowen Independent

THE fall out of the ongoing dispute between pharmacists and the HSE has started to be felt in Inishowen with two local pharmacies confirming this week that they have not replaced staff members who have left in recent months.
Pharmacists have said that decision not to replace the staff members has come as a result of uncertainty in the sector at present.
Already forty Donegal pharmacies, including a dozen in Inishowen, have written to the Health Service Executive stating their intention to withdraw from their contracts with the body from 1 May.
That means that from 1 May they will no longer dispense drugs to the public under the general medical card scheme and the drugs repayment scheme will cease. Currently, patients only pay the first €90 of their monthly drugs bill with the remainder recouped by the pharmacists from the HSE.
“The HSE are trumpeting increased fees under the new contract, but the fact that the contract can be amended by the HSE with only three months notice gives us no security,” said Declan Mulholland of Duffy’s pharmacy in Buncrana.
“The banks won’t touch me or any other pharmacist in circumstances like that. If I knew then what I know now, I wouldn’t have opened my new premises in SuperValu. It is not financially viable under the new contract,” he said.
Local Pharmacists are unhappy with the new contract proposed by the HSE under which the authorities can change the terms and conditions – including fees paid – with just three months’ notice. Pharmacists are also unhappy that the HSE has refused to negotiate with their representative body, the Irish Pharmacy Union.
While the Department of Health negotiated previous contacts with the IPU during the 1990s, the HSE claims that the Competition Acts preclude it from negotiating in this instance.
The country’s Pharmacists however have said that they have borrowed an estimated €1 billion to buy and develop their businesses.
“The new contract leaves out my professional body, the IPU,” said Paul McNeill of the Carn Pharmacy.
“As it stands, the contract is not reasonable. We need an improved contract from the HSE and one that gives our union proper recognition. Give us representation and I’ll sign the contract.”
Recognising that the drugs bill for the State has increased substantially in recent years, Declan Mulholland said that the IPU approached the HSE five years ago to address the issue. “We actually reached agreement on 15 October last, only for the HSE to pull out of it the following day,” he said.
“We want a return to that agreement.”
Describing the new contract as one that does not take account of the difficulties faced by rural pharmacies, he compared the circumstances here with those in Norway where 1,000 chemists have closed in the last ten years to be replaced by a two pharmacy chains. Many smaller towns and rural areas are now without a local pharmacy, Mr. McNeill said.
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