Establishment payments for pharmacies in England will be reduced by 20% from December under the Department of Health’s new funding package.

Pharmacies which currently receive the highest payment of £2,092 a month will see it drop to £1,673.

From next April the payments will fall by a further 40% on current levels when the highest pay will be £1,255 a month.

Pharmacies currently receive £220,000 a year from the NHS including a £25,000 establishment payment which is given to all community pharmacies that dispense more than 2,500 items a month.

Establishment payments currently account for between 80-90% of pharmacy income.

However, following the decrease this funding will be “phased out” completely over “a number of years,” the Government has said.

Article continues below this sponsored advert
Cogora InRead Image
Could 2024 be the year you lift the winner’s trophy? Enter now to find out!
Advertisement

Instead a performance-based system called the Quality Payment Scheme, worth £75m will replace it.

In their Impact Assessment the DH stated: “There is no reliable way of estimating the number of pharmacies that may close as a result of this policy.”

The cut comes in addition to the new funding package announced by the Government yesterday which will see a reduction from £2.8bn a year to £2.687bn for 2016/17 and £2.592bn for 2017/18.

NHS England also announced that the funding for the pharmacy integration fund will be £42m for 2016-2018.

This will support pharmacy to “develop new clinical pharmacy services, working practices and online support to meet the public’s expectations for a modern NHS,” said chief pharmaceutical officer, Dr Keith Ridge.

By Alice Harrold