Brexit
to harm UK's cherished health service, experts say
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[February 26, 2019]
By Kate Kelland
LONDON, Feb 25 (Reuters) - A British exit
from the EU without a deal would have "an immediate and drastic" impact
on availability of medicines and vaccines as well as affecting health
system funding and staffing, experts warned on Monday.
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Although a no-deal Brexit was the worst scenario, even a negotiated
divorce from the European Union would also damage the National
Health Service (NHS), the experts said in a review published in The
Lancet journal.
Britain is scheduled to leave the bloc on March 29th, and Prime
Minister Theresa May has yet to secure parliament's backing for her
negotiated EU withdrawal agreement.
The Lancet review, led by three UK health policy specialists, found
that even under this deal or potential variations of it before the
deadline, Brexit's health impact would be only slightly less harmful
than in a no-deal scenario.
"Some people will dismiss our analysis as 'Project Fear'. But with
just over a month to go to Brexit ... it just isn’t good enough to
keep saying that 'something will work out' without any details of
exactly how," said Martin McKee, a professor at London School of
Hygiene & Tropical Medicine who co-led the review.
The analysis used available legal and political texts on four Brexit
scenarios to assess likely impact on the state-funded NHS, a
much-cherished though increasingly strained pillar of Britain's
welfare services.
It found that one major problem from Brexit under all scenarios
would be staff recruitment and retention - in part because few
provisions have been made for immigration of health workers to the
UK or for long-term recognition of professional qualifications.
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It also said that "under a no-deal Brexit, the absence of a legal
framework for imports and exports is expected to have an immediate
and drastic effect on supply chains" for medicines, vaccines,
medical devices and equipment.
Despite government assurances, the analysis said, shortages would be
likely because stockpiling cannot cover more than a few weeks and
some products - such as radioisotopes used in medical imaging for
diagnosis - cannot be stockpiled.
The British government has asked UK drugmakers to build an
additional six weeks' worth of stockpiles to prepare for any no-deal
Brexit, a target the industry has said will be challenging.
The review said that as one of the largest areas of public spending,
any negative impact on the economy - however short-term - would put
extra pressure on health service financing.
(Reporting by Kate Kelland; Editing by Andrew Cawthorne)
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