Misuse of Drugs Act 1971 (Ketamine etc.) (Amendment) Order 2014

Debate between Lord Colwyn and Baroness Finlay of Llandaff
Monday 31st March 2014

(10 years, 8 months ago)

Grand Committee
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Lord Colwyn Portrait The Deputy Chairman of Committees (Lord Colwyn) (Con)
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My Lords, I must congratulate the noble Lord on his pretty well faultless pronunciation. The question is that the Grand Committee do consider the draft Misuse of Drugs Act 1971 (Ketamine etc.) Amendment Order 2014.

Baroness Finlay of Llandaff Portrait Baroness Finlay of Llandaff (CB)
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My Lords, I echo the Deputy Chairman’s congratulations. Those are pretty difficult drug names to cope with. I have a few comments and a question. The review of zopiclone is welcome. It has often been used inappropriately as a sleeping tablet and viewed as being very safe. The evidence, actually, is not that good for it in terms of patients getting off to sleep. There are lots of other things with sleep hygiene that need to happen to help people sleep. Tramadol has escalated in its prescription and has been viewed as being very safe in the way that physicians have looked at it as an analgesic. I have had a concern for some time that morphine is viewed, with caution, as inappropriate—and more cautiously than may be necessary, because it is a very good analgesic. Therefore, some of these other analgesics, such as tramadol, tend to get prescribed almost too readily and without due caution.

The one I would like to focus on is ketamine. I must declare an interest, having been on the advisory committee of the misuse of drugs sub-committee that was looking at ketamine at the time. I think it is important to record that as a group we were divided on whether ketamine needed to be reclassified. That was because of its clinical use. It is a very useful drug in an emergency. It is a battlefield drug. It has been used in major accidents when you have to get trauma victims out. The safety feature of ketamine is that patients conserve their airway: when you are operating in a collapsed building or on an accident site, when you cannot get access to the person, you may be able to do an amputation under ketamine that otherwise you would not be able to do, because the person will continue to breathe and protect their airway. In fact, they will appear to be conscious. Clinically, I used to use it when I did anaesthetics with children who had severe burns. You could give what is called dissociative anaesthesia: they could turn over and move, but they could tolerate having their dressings changed because they had the analgesia from it.

My question relates to the supply, after reclassification, to hospices where ketamine is used for neuropathic pain. There is a concern—which just fell into my inbox this morning, as it happens—that hospital pharmacies that supply hospices with drugs, particularly morphine, will now have to purchase a licence, at a cost of £5,000. They are concerned that it will make it more difficult for them to have the supply of drugs that they need. I would like a reassurance from the Minister that the legitimate therapeutic supply of ketamine, particularly to hospices and in the community for patients with severe neuropathic pain from malignant disease and from other conditions that are progressive, will not be impeded by reclassification. For some of these patients it is the only drug that will get control over their complex neuropathic pain.

I also ask the Minister whether it will fall under this licensing requirement and whether he will undertake to look at the charge for this licence, which seems to be very high. Voluntary sector hospices are trying to provide a high level of care to patients on behalf of the NHS, bearing a lot of the cost out of their own fundraising, and they want to be linked to a hospital pharmacy because of the quality control and governance assurances that go along with being linked to a hospital pharmacy.