Today, the House of Lords Public Services publishes its report,
Medicines security - a national
priority. The report finds that medicine supply shortages are
not prioritised as the potential national security issue that
they represent given the significant risk to people's health when
they cannot access necessary medication. In addition, the
UK Government and the NHS are key to ensuring patients get the
medicines they need, but there is a lack of oversight and
coordination over medicine resilience. Key related findings
include:
- The Government is not proactive in protecting the UK from
fragile supply chains but rather focuses on reactive actions when
shortages have already occurred. It does not effectively
communicate shortages, or solutions, to frontline staff such as
pharmacists and GPs.
- There is little oversight or leadership from the Department
of Health and Social Care of medicine stocks in the UK, nor the
potential risks against critical medicines, whose absence would
have significant impact on patients should they be in short
supply.
- There have been increasing concerns raised about medicines
shortages with 73% of pharmacy workers in 2025 stating that
ongoing issues with medicines supply are putting patients at
risk.
- The majority of active ingredients required for medicines
used by the NHS are controlled by China and India or other single
sources. This leaves UK patients at risk from reliance on fragile
global supply chains which could be affected by dynamic changes
in geopolitics, trade or national disasters in these regions.
- 80% of the prescribed medicines the NHS uses are ‘generic'
medicines, which are medicines that can be
made by any manufacturer, but just a quarter of these drugs are
made in the UK – with the rest being made largely
in Europe and Asia.
The report makes several key recommendations:
- The Government should accept that medicine security is, and
should be treated as, a national security issue.
- The Government needs to improve how it shares information
with care providers about shortages and availability of medicine
throughout the supply chain, and ensure GPs, hospitals and
community pharmacies have the tools they need to access medicines
and support patients during shortages.
- Medicine supply should be included in the Government's
National Risk Register, with regular preparedness exercises
focused on large-scale medicine and Active Pharmaceutical
Ingredient (API) failure.
- There must be a named individual with the appropriate
seniority and authority to oversee resilience in the UK's
medicine supply chain, working across Government to prioritise
this issue and ensure necessary data is shared.
- The Government must boost the UK manufacture of generic
medicines and ingredients used by the NHS. It should work with
the pharmaceutical industry to identify and prevent shortages,
through boosting medicines manufacturing and supply chain
resilience both globally and once medicines have arrived on UK
shores. The Government should clearly signal the importance of
stable supply chains to the industry through resilience-focused
procurement and contract management.
- The Government should identify and share which medicines they
believe are critical for the UK through publishing a Critical
Medicines List and API list based on clinical priority and supply
chain vulnerability. This would be used to inform UK production,
potential medicines for stockpiling and contract negotiations.
The Government should set out how it plans to boost resilience
for medicines on the Critical list.
, who chaired the
Committee during this inquiry said:
“We tend to only think of medicines and medicine supply when we
are ill and need access to medication via our GPs, hospitals or
pharmacies. However, the issue is of great importance because of
the risk to people's health and wellbeing if medicine shortages
occur. Our inquiry found that concerns have been raised about
medicine shortages and there are issues with medicines
resilience. However, the Department of Health and Social Care
(DHSC) are not particularly proactive in tackling these issues,
and it is not given the attention needed given the enormous
impact on the country if problems arise. There is a general lack
of oversight and leadership to address current shortcomings
across the medicines supply and manufacturing process.
“We've set out a number of recommendations in our report which
should help tackle the issues raised. Chief amongst these is the
need for better communication of any shortages to GPs, hospitals
and pharmacies so they can take necessary action to support
patients and more importantly, the recognition that medicines
supply chain resilience is a national security issue that should
be on the national security risk register and prioritised
accordingly. There needs to be senior government oversight of the
issue with cross department coordination so that necessary action
can be taken to both tackle issues when they occur and head off
issues by taking timely preventative measures.
“The Government also need to look more closely at how we can
boost medicines manufacturing within the UK to reduce our
reliance on single source supplies or an over reliance on China
or India where the majority of our NHS medicines are made. This
should ideally reduce our vulnerability to outside factors such
as national disasters or trade or political disputes affecting
increasingly fragile global supply chains. The Government needs
to consider compiling a Critical Medicines List and then look at
how we can increase the UK manufacture of the medicines on that
list and shore up our resilience and stockpiling based on
it.
“Medicines are essential to the health of the nation and so we
urge the Government to follow our recommendations to ensure the
UK has the vital, strong, resilient medicines supply chain it
needs to keep people healthy.”