Overview of the programme

In England, the NHS primary care system dispenses over 1 billion prescription items every year. As more people live longer with multiple long-term health conditions, the number of medicines they take often increases. This can create a significant burden for the person trying to manage multiple medicine regimes, and in some cases it can cause harm.

Problematic polypharmacy adds a cost to the healthcare system and diminishes quality care for the patient – and most of this is entirely preventable.

The AHSN Network national polypharmacy programme is creating clinical, multi-stakeholder communities of practice across England, hosted by regional AHSNs, focusing on problematic polypharmacy within local areas.

Through a series of national webinars, education and training, the programme is also supporting routine use of the NHSBSA Polypharmacy Prescribing Comparators to identify and prioritise patients for shared decision making structured medication reviews.

Training through evidence-based polypharmacy Action Learning Sets (ALS) are being rolled out across England to support GPs, pharmacists and other healthcare professionals who undertake prescribing or medication reviews to understand the complex issues around stopping inappropriate medicines safely.

We are also working with patients and the public to drive regional testing and evaluation of public-facing initiatives to change public perceptions of prescriptions, and encouraging patients to be open about their medicine concerns and expectations.

An introduction to the AHSN Network Polypharmacy programme

Summary of resources

Below, you will find information collated to help you learn more about this programme’s aims, impact, and wider context, including evidence and information to support your implementation.

The resources have been selected for the benefit of health and care professionals. Some information links out to third party sources, and the AHSN Network is not responsible for the content on those sites.

Nurse smiling with patient

Studies show that over 50% of older people are prescribed a medicine with more harm than benefit, leading to preventable morbidity, hospitalisation and mortality. In England in February 2022, there were over 876,000 people on 10 or more medicines and over 349,000 of these people were 75 or over. Taking 10 or more medications can increase the chance of hospitalisation by 300%. (Source: Payne, 2014) 

The National Overprescribing Review’s (NOR) Good for you, good for us, good for everybody report was published in 2021 by the Department of Health and Social Care and led by Dr Keith Ridge, former Chief Pharmaceutical Officer for England. 

It found that overprescribing is a serious problem in health systems internationally that has grown dramatically over the last 25 years. The report identifies two main causes: systemic and cultural. 

The response to the NOR report is now an NHS England Programme, which sets out 20 cross-system recommendations to be led by a range of NHS and affiliate organisations. The AHSN Network national polypharmacy programme directly supports the delivery, and potentially acceleration, of recommendations 8, 16, 17 and 18 into operational practice. 

Polypharmacy is also one of the key themes of the World Health Organisation’s Global Patient Safety Challenge. They are aiming to reduce severe avoidable medication related harm by 50% globally over five years from 2017 to 2022. 

Our programme aligns with the GP Directed Enhanced Service (DES) Contract Specifications and the NHS Long Term Plan around medication safety. 

Polypharmacy: understanding the data webinar recording

We’re creating support networks across the country to identify local priorities and make better use of the NHSBSA Polypharmacy Comparators to assess patients in high risk groups. Watch a recording of our November 2022 webinar to find out more or register for future webinars. 

Several key policy papers set the context for the work needed to deliver effective services for individuals taking multiple medicines: 

The Primary Care Network (PCN) Direct Enhanced Services (DES) sets out the core requirements and entitlements for PCNs. 

The 2020/21 Network Contract DES introduced three new services to be delivered by PCNs, including structured medication reviews and medicines optimisation for tackling polypharmacy. 

The NHS National Patient Safety Strategy includes the aims and ambitions of the Medicines Safety Improvement Programme – to reduce medication-related harm in the NHS, focusing on high-risk drugs, situations and vulnerable patients. This includes priority projects to ‘enable structured medicines reviews across an advanced strategic transformation partnership (STPs) or integrated care systems (ICSs) starting with population at risk due to polypharmacy’.

National enquiry

To find out more about any of our national programmes, please complete this form.

Thank you for your message. It has been sent.
There was an error trying to send your message. Please try again later.