Wed. Oct 2nd, 2024
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BOOTS has marked another four local pharmacies for permanent closures.

It comes after the pharmacy chain previously announced it would be pulling the shutters down on 300 shops over the next year.

Boots has marked more of its chemists for closure1

Boots has marked more of its chemists for closureCredit: Alamy

The high street chain is now set to close its pharmacy in Bede Precinct, Jarrow, in mid-March.

The Jarrow store will cease to provide pharmaceutical services on from March 16, 2024 and will be removed from the pharmaceutical list for the area.

Reacting to the news on Facebook, one regular visitor said: “For crying out loud.”

Jarrow MP, Kate Osborne MP said: “I am hugely disappointed with the news that Boots Pharmacy is closing its branch in the Viking Centre in Jarrow.

“It provides a vital service to my constituents, collecting prescriptions and access to over the counter medications.

“Thirteen years of managed decline by consecutive conservative governments have damaged our high streets. This closure will be a massive loss to our town centre.

Boots will also be closing a further two stores in Bristol in Southmead and Hartcliffe.

We’ve asked the firm to confirm when these chemists will shut for good.

A separate branch on Chepstow Road, Maindee in South Wales will close to shoppers for the final time on January 27, 2024.

The closures are part of wider plans that will see the retailer’s total shops reduced from 2,200 to 1,900.

When the plans were announced in June, Boots had not confirmed which stores were set to shut.

It reported that they would be from sites with multiple shops in one area.

But over time, the healthy and beauty chain has revealed which shops would be closing for good.

Community pharmacies are essential for providing services to local neighbourhoods but hundreds have been shut in recent years.

Pharmacies have struggled financially for years due to the level of reimbursements they receive from the NHS and the soaring costs of pharmaceuticals.

Chemist chains are also being asked to pick up the slack from the struggling health service by providing more services, such as vaccinations.

The pharmacy industry has lost £1.6 billion in the last decade because the NHS’s pharmacy contract has not kept pace with inflation.

Pharmacies have said that as a result, they face a massive cut to their real-term funding, which is resulting in mass closures.

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