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			 Four-year-old Nora has cerebral palsy and epilepsy and relies on 
			imported Epilim and Keppra daily to stop her suffering seizures. 
			Elgarf wants to stock up on the drugs in case supplies are hit but 
			she can't because they are only available on a monthly prescription. 
 For Nora, "this could be matter of life and death," Elgarf told 
			Reuters at her home in southwest London.
 
 "It could mean being sent off in an ambulance to hospital with a 
			massive seizure that lasts five minutes plus. She cannot miss those 
			medicines. There's no ifs and buts about it and we cannot use 
			alternatives either."
 
 With the clock ticking, British lawmakers are still struggling to 
			agree a withdrawal treaty with the European Union, having 
			comprehensively rejected Prime Minister Theresa May's agreement last 
			month.
 
 The default position means Britain will leave on March 29 without a 
			deal in place unless something can be agreed beforehand. That has 
			led to fears that supply chains will be severely disrupted leading 
			to shortages of food and medicines.
 
 According to the British government, about three-quarters of 
			medicines used by the state-run National Health Service (NHS) come 
			via the EU. May, a Type 1 diabetic, has said she herself relies on 
			insulin produced in another EU country.
 
 WORLD'S BIGGEST FRIDGE BUYER
 
 Last August, Health Secretary Matt Hancock outlined plans to ensure 
			Britain had an extra six weeks of supplies in the event of a no-deal 
			Brexit.
 
 In January, he said Britain had bought 5,000 fridges to hold 
			medicines, making him the biggest buyer of fridges in the world, and 
			secured warehouse space.
 
 "Making sure patients continue to have access to the medicines they 
			need is paramount...," said health minister responsible for Brexit 
			planning Stephen Hammond.
 
 "We are working extremely closely with industry to make sure there 
			are significant supplies of these drugs in the UK," Hammond wrote in 
			an article last week.
 
			
			 
			
 But some Britons do not share that confidence, and anecdotal 
			evidence from newspaper readers suggests people are stockpiling 
			everything from children's painkillers to medicines for serious 
			conditions.
 
 For Elgarf, a member of anti-Brexit Facebook group "48 per cent 
			Preppers" - a reference to the percentage that voted to remain in 
			the EU in the 2016 referendum - that is not an option, and that has 
			left her fearful.
 
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			"It doesn’t matter even if I had all the money in the world, I can’t 
			go and buy these medicines because they are prescription-only. I 
			have no way of securing my child’s future," she said.
 It is not just patients and their families who are concerned.
 
 The chief executive of a body running hospitals in Birmingham, 
			England's second-biggest city, warned last week there was a risk 
			operations could be canceled because of a drug shortage.
 
 "In the event of a chaotic, no-deal exit, many NHS trusts could 
			quickly run out of vital medical supplies," Dr Dave Rosser wrote in 
			a memo to his board of directors.
 
			
			 
			  
			He said "well-informed and non-political NHS sources" had estimated 
			goods from Europe across the English Channel "could be reduced to 
			between one-third and one-fifth of current daily volumes for a 
			period of at least some months."
 According to the Brexit Health Alliance, an industry body, 45 
			million patient packs go to the EU from the UK every month, and 37 
			million packs go the other way.
 
 "Any divergence from these harmonized standards by the UK in the 
			future, and a lack of agreement on cooperation with the EU on 
			medicines and medical devices, would mean that supply chains are at 
			risk," it said.
 
 One unintended consequence of the concern is that patients stocking 
			up on medicines might bring about problems themselves.
 
 "Hospitals, pharmacies, (family doctor) surgeries and patients 
			should not stockpile medicines at any point during this process," 
			health minister Hammond said.
 
 "Doing so risks shortages for other patients. If everyone does what 
			they are supposed to, we are confident the supply of medicines will 
			continue uninterrupted whatever the Brexit outcome."
 
 (Writing by Michael Holden; editing by John Stonestreet)
 
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