sale of the unit made obligatory in case of shortage

The delivery of drugs to the unit will be made compulsory for certain antibiotics in supply shortage, a measure intended to combat shortages and antibiotic resistance, a source close to the matter told AFP on Wednesday.

There is no rationing. The idea is to make it compulsory to distribute medications to the unit when there is tension. But not all, only certain antibiotics, this source indicated on Wednesday, as the presentation of the 2024 social security financing bill approaches.

There is also an interest in fighting antibiotic resistance in this way, she added.

This decision could also help reduce waste by delivering the exact number of tablets prescribed, in a country where the consumption of antibiotics remains among the highest in Europe and which was faced last winter with shortages of amoxicillin, an antibiotic used commonly in certain bacterial infections.

This project leaves pharmacists perplexed: they wonder about the practical modalities and point out a problem of traceability.

Cutting the blisters (packaging shells, editor’s note) is not the right answer. In terms of batch number traceability, it’s a real hassle, estimated last week the president of the union of community pharmacists’ unions (Uspo).

According to the pharmaceutical laboratory lobby (Leem), there is no consensus on single unit delivery from an industrial point of view.

The government also wants to allow patients to obtain a diagnosis in pharmacies in the event of suspicion of tonsillitis or cystitis and then possible treatment without a prescription if the diagnostic aid test (Trod) turns out to be positive.

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