Homeopathy has been prescribed by 700 GPs over the last year, according to new research into prescribing figures.
According to research by academics from Oxford University, 5,975 homeopathic items were prescribed in England between July 2016 and July 2017, racking up a ÂŁ77,921 bill.
They were amongst a list of 19 items branded âlow priorityâ by NHS England highlighted by a new tool on Openprescribing.net . The combined bill for the items was ÂŁ180 million last year.
The tool developed by Dr. Ben Goldacre and colleagues in the EBM DataLab at Oxford Universityâs Nuffield Department of Primary Care Health Sciences uses data from NHS Digital and looks at prescribing patterns for CCGs and individual practices.
The researchers found that use of the 19 low value items declined over the last year, with the exception of fentanyl immediate release, lidocaine plasters and tadalafil once daily.
They concluded: âCosts have recently risen very dramatically for some of these treatments (coproxamol, liothyronine and trimipramine), making the cost per prescription very high. Importantly, a large proportion of practices avoid many of these treatments altogether. This suggests that complete avoidance of these 19 low-priority treatments is clinically and practically feasible and achievable, in many cases.â
Dr. Goldacre said: âWe think itâs good for everyone to be able to see what GP practices are prescribing.â
âIt gives everyone the power to scrutinise prescribing at their own GP practice and explore how theyâre responding to changes in clinical evidence – and price – given the finite resources available to the NHS.â
Dr. Goldacre said that homeopathy was still prescribed at least once last year by 700 practices, despite the lack of evidence base for its value except as a placebo.
In 2010, Parliamentâs Science and Technology Select Committee recommended: âThe Government should stop allowing the funding of homeopathy on the NHS.â
The analysis also looked at spending on co-proxamol, which was withdrawn in 2005 when it cost ÂŁ1.05 a pack.
Prescriptions at ÂŁ115 a pack cost NHS England more than ÂŁ7.6 million over the last year.
âEach of the 19 treatments termed âlow priorityâ by NHS England represent possible waste in our health service, due to either a lack of good-quality evidence for their safety and effectiveness, or because thereâs a cheaper alternative,â said Dr. Goldacre.

