Abstract

BackgroundCoeliac disease affects approximately 1% of the population and is increasingly diagnosed in the United Kingdom. A nationwide consultation in England has recommend that state-funded provisions for gluten-free (GF) food should be restricted to bread and mixes but not banned, yet financial strain has prompted regions of England to begin partially or fully ceasing access to these provisions. The impact of these policy changes on different stakeholders remains unclear.MethodsPrescription data were collected for general practice services across England (n = 7176) to explore changes in National Health Service (NHS) expenditure on GF foods over time (2012–2017). The effects of sex, age, deprivation and rurality on GF product expenditure were estimated using a multi-level gamma regression model. Spending rate within NHS regions that had introduced a ‘complete ban’ or a ‘complete ban with age-related exceptions’ was compared to spending in the same time periods amongst NHS regions which continued to fund prescriptions for GF products.ResultsAnnual expenditure on GF products in 2012 (before bans were introduced in any area) was £25.1 million. Higher levels of GF product expenditure were found in general practices in areas with lower levels of deprivation, higher levels of rurality and higher proportions of patients aged under 18 and over 75. Expenditure on GF food within localities that introduced a ‘complete ban’ or a ‘complete ban with age-related exceptions’ were reduced by approximately 80% within the 3 months following policy changes. If all regions had introduced a ‘complete ban’ policy in 2014, the NHS in England would have made an annual cost-saving of £21.1 million (equivalent to 0.24% of the total primary care medicines expenditure), assuming no negative sequelae.ConclusionsThe introduction of more restrictive GF prescribing policies has been associated with ‘quick wins’ for NHS regions under extreme financial pressure. However, these initial savings will be largely negated if GF product policies revert to recently published national recommendations. Better evidence of the long-term impact of restricting GF prescribing on patient health, expenses and use of NHS services is needed to inform policy.

Highlights

  • Coeliac disease affects approximately 1% of the population and is increasingly diagnosed in the United Kingdom

  • Complete banb aPrescribing was limited to a lower number of monthly units or a restricted set of products which was largely dependent on the individual Clinical Commissioning Group bGluten-free products still prescribed for children/adolescents under the age of 18 or 19, and in some cases pregnant women availability of data on CCGs with policies under review, this study focused on CCGs with no ban, a complete ban, or a complete ban

  • Main findings We found that expenditure on GF products was reduced by an average of approximately 80% within the 3 months after CCGs introduced a ‘complete ban’ or ‘complete ban with age-related exceptions’ on GF prescriptions

Read more

Summary

Introduction

Coeliac disease affects approximately 1% of the population and is increasingly diagnosed in the United Kingdom. A widely noted reaction to this pressure has been the increasing prioritisation of cost-saving in the management of medicines, and subsequent disinvestment in prescribed items deemed to be of ‘low clinical value’ such as travel vaccines and homeopathy [5]. Another highly debated example is the prescription of gluten-free (GF) foods for people with gluten enteropathy, known as coeliac disease (CD) [6]

Objectives
Methods
Results
Discussion
Conclusion
Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call