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Some Australians forced to choose 'between food and medicine', new survey finds

A new survey has shed light on the financial decisions faced by some Australians prescribed medicines not covered by the PBS.

A pharmacist in a white coat reviews a prescription while consulting with an elderly woman at a pharmacy counter.

"Nearly half of all Australians are prescribed medicines that aren’t on the PBS [Pharmaceutical Benefits Scheme], and for many of them the situation is dire," McKell Institute chief executive Edward Cavanough has said. Source: Getty / Morsa Images

In brief

  • A new survey found almost one in five respondents couldn't afford medicines that aren't listed on the Pharmaceutical Benefits Scheme.
  • The chief executive of the McKell Institute, which carried out the survey, said its findings are "a bit of a wake-up call".

Australians are taking expired medication, skipping doses or opting to delay or not fill a prescription as the cost of living eats into their medicine cabinets.

The federal government has tried to tackle the issue by bringing down the maximum price for prescription drugs listed on its subsidy scheme to $25.

While that is said to save taxpayers more than $1 billion, 43 per cent of Australians have been prescribed medicines not subsidised, a survey commissioned by the McKell Institute has found.

As a result, almost one in five people said they could not afford medicines not listed on the Pharmaceutical Benefits Scheme (PBS).

About one in four people prescribed medicines outside the scheme said they do not buy the medications, around a third delayed purchases, while 16 per cent were forced to go without essentials to afford them.

Overall, more than one in five of those surveyed said they had delayed filling a prescription due to cost and 18 per cent did not fill it at all.

Some 15 per cent skipped a dose to make it last longer, and 12 per cent reported taking expired medication rather than filling and paying for a new script.

"They have to make a really hard decision between food and medicine, between something for their family or for themselves," McKell Institute chief executive Edward Cavanough told AAP.

"It's a bit of a wake-up call."

Australia's PBS listing process.

Part of the problem is Australia's slow PBS listing process.

In 2022, it took 391 days for a prescription medicine to go from being approved for use to being included on Australia's subsidy scheme.

By comparison, it took 101 days in Japan, 121 days in Germany and 167 days in the UK.

This has worsened in recent years, widening to more than 600 days by 2025.

"We also have this flood of new and innovative medicines being approved," Cavanough said.

"It's a really positive thing to be able to capitalise on the benefits of that.

"(But) the PBS can't keep up."

Government defends investments in PBS

The government has reduced the maximum price on prescription medication multiple times since coming to office, with the PBS continually held up as a beacon of health policy by Australia's major political players.

Health Minister Mark Butler on Friday announced a drug used to treat cerebral palsy was also being added to the scheme.

"Having already slashed the cost of medicines — with the largest cut to the cost of medicines in the history of the PBS in 2023 — we've gone even further, cutting the maximum price of a PBS medicine to $25, and frozen the maximum price for cardholders at $7.70 for the rest of the decade," Butler told AAP.

"If we hadn't made our investments in cheaper medicines, medicine prices would be as high as $50 a script this year."

Cavanough said the government "deserves credit for the Cheaper Medicines reform, which has delivered genuine relief to millions of people, but this research shows that the policy isn’t helping almost half of all Australians".

"Nearly half of all Australians are prescribed medicines that aren’t on the PBS, and for many of them, the situation is dire," he said.

"When people are taking expired medication because they can’t afford to refill their script, it quickly changes from a minor policy gap into a serious public health problem."

"The government has shown it is willing to act boldly on medicines policy, but the question now is whether it is willing to go further."


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4 min read

Published

Source: AAP, SBS



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