Goodbye monthly pharmacy queues — Italy makes chronic‑disease prescriptions valid for 12 months
For millions of people managing long‑term conditions, the monthly ritual of rushing to the GP, waiting in crowded surgery rooms and asking for the same prescription again and again has been a constant source of stress. Now Italy has taken a practical step to ease that burden: under the recently approved “Ddl Semplificazioni”, prescriptions for patients on stable chronic therapies can be issued with a 12‑month validity. As a result, routine administrative trips to the doctor can be drastically reduced — and both patients and GPs can reclaim time for what matters most: real clinical care.
How the new system works — simple, but smart
The mechanism is straightforward. The GP assesses whether a patient’s condition and treatment are stable. If so, the doctor records on the national health service prescription the required quantity and the posology (dose and schedule) sufficient for a full year. Importantly, this does not mean patients collect a whole year’s supply of medication at once. Pharmacies will continue to dispense the medication in installments — monthly or bimonthly — according to usual dispensing rules. The aim is to combine continuity of treatment with safeguards that prevent waste and ensure clinical oversight.
Who benefits and who is eligible?
Eligibility is clinical: each decision belongs to the treating physician, who must confirm stability and appropriateness of a 12‑month prescription. The new rule is not automatic and does not remove the medical judgment required to ensure safety.
The practical wins — quality of life, time and dignity
This change delivers tangible benefits:
Above all, the reform recognises that managing chronic disease should be about enabling a normal life — not a calendar of bureaucratic hurdles.
Safety and ongoing monitoring — safeguards remain
Extending prescription validity does not mean stepping away from medical supervision. The system keeps safety at its core:
What patients must do — practical tips
Impact on families and carers
The ripple effects of this reform are meaningful for households. Carers who often juggle work, home and medical appointments will find fewer disruptions in their schedules. Families benefit from reduced logistical stress — less time off work, fewer transport costs and reduced emotional strain associated with frequent clinical visits.
System‑level effects: smarter use of resources
At a systemic level, this measure can improve the allocation of healthcare resources. When routine administrative tasks are minimised, primary care teams can concentrate on prevention, complex care management and those experiencing acute problems. Over time, this may help reduce waiting lists and increase access to timely consultations for patients who need them most.
Possible pitfalls and things to watch
Questions for policymakers and providers
This policy shift is an important recognition of the lived reality of chronic disease. By replacing monthly administrative chores with clinically driven, patient‑centred care pathways, it restores dignity and offers practical relief to many. For patients, the first step is to speak with your GP to understand whether you are eligible, and to plan together the follow‑up and dispensing rhythm that will keep your treatment safe and reliable over the year ahead.
