Labour Government supports community pharmacies to provide more services for people in Birmingham, Edgbaston
- Preet Kaur Gill MP
- Apr 24
- 2 min read
People in Birmingham will benefit from more services delivered at their local pharmacy following record investment for community pharmacies by the Labour government.
Labour promised to shift care from hospitals into the community and community pharmacies will play a vital role in delivering patient services at convenient locations.
Under the Conservatives, years of underfunding and neglect left the sector facing significant financial shortfalls, impacting community pharmacies on local high streets and patients in Birmingham. The packaged announced by the Labour government is the first full-year funding package agreed by the sector since 2023, providing community pharmacies with an extra £617 million over two years.
Our plan will:
End the postcode lottery for women by making the 'morning-after pill' available free of charge at pharmacies on the NHS for the first time ever
Boost mental health support in the community by offering patients suffering from depression convenient support at pharmacies when they are prescribed antidepressants
Give more patients easier access to consultations by cutting red tape and bureaucracy so more of the pharmacy team are able to deliver a wider range of services
Boost funding for medicine supply so patients have better access to the medicines prescribed for them.
The reforms will not only improve access for patients, they will free up GP time and help cut waiting lists.
Preet Kaur Gill, MP for Birmingham, Edgbaston said:
"After years of neglect under the Conservatives, we saw the closure of community pharmacies across my constituency of Birmingham, Edgbaston.
"This Labour Government promised they would shift the focus of care from hospital to community and, through this deal, that is exactly what they are delivering for high streets and patients in our community."
Health Minister Stephen Kinnock said:
"Community pharmacists are at the heart of local healthcare, and we want them to play a bigger role as we shift care out of hospitals and into the community through our Plan for Change.
"We're working to turn around a decade of underfunding and neglect that has left the sector on the brink of collapse.
"This package of record investment and reform is a vital first step to getting community pharmacies back on their feet and fit for the future.
"This agreement shows how this government is working in partnership with community pharmacy to deliver more care for patients closer to their home, freeing up GP appointments, and catching ill-health earlier and preventing it in the first place."
ENDS
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