Skip to Main Content

Leaflets and posters for patients and healthcare professionals on impact and management of medicines supply issues. Print to use in surgeries and pharmacies.

About medicines supply advice · Advice generated by DHSC

This page was prepared and is being maintained by SPS on behalf of the Department of Health and Social Care Medicine Supply Team (DHSC).

About the materials

The Department of Health and Social Care (DHSC) and NHS England have produced these documents to support patients and healthcare professionals.

Patient leaflet

The leaflet below gives patients an understanding of why medicines may be in short supply. It also directs patients to where to get advice and support to address concerns they may have when there is a shortage of their medicine.

The leaflet is tri-fold to be printed, folded, and handed out to patients who do not receive the medicine they are expecting because of a national supply issue.

The leaflet is supplementary information and should not replace conversations between healthcare professionals and patients regarding medicine shortages.

Advice for patients during a medicines shortage NHS leaflet

Print the patient leaflet from this PDF link

Leaflet with NHS logo. Headings: ‘FAQs continued’, ‘Recommended actions in a medicines shortage’, and ‘Advice for patients during a medicines shortage’.

Text: ‘Will my pharmacist be able to tell me when my medicine is back in stock? All advice provided by the government and NHS is regularly reviewed and kept up to date on an online Medicine Supply Tool which both doctors and Pharmacists can use when looking up your medicine to see if specific advice has been issued.’ ‘What is the government doing to tackle medicines shortages? Medicine suppliers are legally required to report any medicine shortages to the government in advance. The government monitors supply and works with organisations across the medicines supply chain to reduce the impact of medicine shortages for patients. This includes working with medicine suppliers who are taking steps to increase supply quickly. While the medicine supply chain is facing pressure, medicine suppliers are taking action to minimise the impact on patients.’ ‘If I have questions about my medicine shortage and the impact it might have on me what should I do? Speak to your pharmacist or doctor or contact NHS 111.’

Recommended actions: ‘Order your medicine or repeat prescription in advance, ideally when you still have medication, so your pharmacist has time to order what you need.’ ‘Talk to your pharmacist in the first instance, and early is preferable.’ ‘Avoid stockpiling and ordering more than you need until your next prescription.’

Right panel: ‘Advice for patients during a medicines shortage.’ ‘We know how difficult and stressful medicines supply issues can be for patients and carers. This brochure is intended to support patients in England to get the information and treatment they need in the event of a shortage.’ Image shows shelves of assorted medicines

Pharmacist and GP poster

The poster gives pharmacists and GPs guidance on what to do when faced with a shortage of a medicine. It also directs on where to find the most up to date management advice for national supply issues to best support patients. It is intended to be printed and displayed in staff-only areas within community pharmacies, GPs and other primary care sites.

Information for Community Pharmacies and GP Practices: What to do when a medicine is discontinued or in shortage poster

Print the poster from this PDF link

Poster titled ‘Information for Community Pharmacies and GP Practices: What to do when a medicine is discontinued or in shortage’. Headings: ‘Stay informed’, ‘Take action’, ‘Support patients’.

Text under heading stay informed:

“Most medicines are in good supply, but the supply chains we rely on are highly complex and global, and medicines shortages can arise for a wide range of reasons. The Department of Health and Social Care (DHSC) and NHS England (NHSE), working with clinical specialists and the Specialist Pharmacy Service (SPS), issue guidance for healthcare professionals on medicines shortages.”
Supply issues are communicated by several routes:

Medicine Supply Notification (MSN)
“An MSN provides details on the duration of a shortage, clinical advice on how to manage patients, actions to be taken, and suggested alternative medicines. It is cascaded via email to primary and secondary care as appropriate.”

National Patient Safety Alerts (NatPSA)
“A NatPSA provides details and actions for more critical medicines supply issues that organisations are expected to implement within a set timescale. It is cascaded via the MHRA Central Alerting System (CAS) and hosted on their website.”

Medicines Supply Tool
“The Medicines Supply Tool hosts all supply issues that have been communicated via an MSN or NatPSA and lower impact issues not communicated via these routes. It is updated in real time including changes to resupply dates and actions.”

Serious Shortage Protocol (SSP)
“SSPs allow community pharmacists to dispense a specific alternative treatment option or quantity of medicine to that which was prescribed. They are issued in conjunction with an MSN or NatPSA, hosted on the NHSBSA website and cascaded via email.”

“Links to the Medicines Supply Tool, MHRA Central Alerting System, and NHSBSA website can be found via the QR code.”

Text under heading take action:

Community pharmacy / dispensing doctors
“Stay up to date with live SSPs so that, where available, you may supply in line with them.”
“Where a potential shortage is identified locally that has not been communicated nationally:”

  • “contact your wholesaler(s) or check their website for information to understand if it is a local issue. They may put in place specific demand management processes at wholesaler level, such as allocations or caps.”
  • “liaise with local pharmacies to understand if they have stock.”
  • “consider contacting the prescriber to discuss alternative treatment options and to arrange a new prescription.”
  • “Consider when the issue is due to resolve, how much stock the patient has left and stock availability in neighbouring pharmacies.”
  • “report new issues via Community Pharmacy England (CPE).”

GP Practices
“Various members of the practice team can coordinate medication supply during shortages, including GPs, practice managers, and wider team members.”
“NHSE and DHSC provide guidance and support but practices do have the flexibility to manage issues in line with their local structures, teams, and patient needs.”
“When you hear of a potential shortage locally via a patient or a community pharmacy that has not been communicated nationally:”

  • “consider issuing a new prescription for an alternative treatment option for patients who have run out of their usual supply or will do before the resupply date.”
  • “seek specialist/secondary care input to determine other treatment options where needed.”
  • “In some cases, a handwritten prescription may be required if the alternative is an unlicensed product which does not appear on prescribing systems.”
  • “speak to local pharmacies to ensure new shortages not listed on the Medicines Supply Tool have been reported via CPE.”

Text under heading supporting patients:

“Community pharmacies and GP teams regularly manage supply issues and will be doing everything they can to support patients.”
“In the event of a shortage, we suggest you:”

  • “explain to patients that there is a medicine supply issue and whether this is a national shortage or a local issue with a medicine not being immediately available in the pharmacy but available to order from elsewhere.”
  • “share information on the anticipated resupply dates, noting that dates can change for a variety of reasons.”
  • “ensure that patients are not left without treatment or alternative options when there are supply disruptions.”
  • “counsel patients on the alternative treatment option being prescribed or dispensed, reassuring them that they are receiving an appropriate treatment, and the importance of continuing to take it.”
  • “inform patients where unlicensed medicines are being prescribed and supplied and advise them appropriately.”
  • “advise patients not to ration or stockpile medication as this could have adverse effects for their treatment or the treatment of others.”
  • “refer patients to our guide that is aimed specifically to support patients.”

Additional resources

Healthcare professionals may find the following additional information useful:

Medicines Supply Tool

Latest information on supply issues, actions to take, alternatives to use, and expected resolution dates. Content provided by DHSC and MVA team, NHS England.