75 years – that’s a long time isn’t it!
If I think about my Pharmacy, S G Barai Pharmacy, it has been on the corner of Erskine Road in Sutton for more than 75 years.

When the NHS was created it was owned by a Mr Craig who sold it to a Mr E Thompson in May 1949 and this is the first entry he made in the prescription register when he took over the business. Then in February 1979, my parents bought the Pharmacy and we continued using that same register. In fact I still use it to date as my private prescription register and, every time I get it out, I feel the nostalgia and history that sits within the pages of the book.

So much has changed over the years, as I think back over the 44 years that my family have owned the Pharmacy. The building itself has been a constant for the local people who live around my pharmacy. So many of our patients have been using the Pharmacy for 75 years and longer in some cases. I love hearing the stories of their relationship with the Pharmacy and its staff.
I recently met a lady who remembers that the Pharmacy was one of the only places with a telephone and when her mum was giving birth to her brother, she had asked her husband to run down to the chemist to ask them to phone the Doctor.
Last month I met the first member of staff who we employed when we took over the Pharmacy. She had worked with Mr Thompson for many years before this too and she shared some memories with me about the old-fashioned wooden till, the way they wrapped everything people bought in paper and how Mr Thompson hosted a lending book library from the back room of the Pharmacy.

My personal relationship with the Pharmacy stems back to my childhood. I grew up living on top of the Pharmacy, always wanting to be in the Pharmacy talking to customers and arranging stock on the shelves. This July marks the 20 year anniversary of me taking over the running of the Pharmacy too and I feel like I have blinked and 20 years have passed by!
There are many values of the NHS that have been core values for the way I have run the Pharmacy too. I have always strived to be part of the NHS locally, from attending local meetings with GPs and practice colleagues from the onset to being the current co-chair of my local PCN’s Integrated Neighbourhood Team. I have known that as a Community Pharmacist I can’t work in isolation if I want to truly make a difference to the lives of my patients.

I have continued to provide a large range of NHS services to my patients over the years and when we took on the challenge of being a Covid Vaccination Site we stepped up to a whole new level of service provision. Recently we undertook our largest vaccination program for the Spring Booster campaign when we took on the vaccination of patients in Care Homes in Sutton and the housebound patients too.
Whilst at one of the care homes I vaccinated my old headmistress. She sadly had advanced dementia and couldn’t remember me, but meeting her after all these years triggered a memory for me. My headmistress had a peculiar passion for obituaries and in her assemblies, she would often read us obituaries from the Times newspaper. At the time, I used to find it quite morbid until one day she explained why she did it. She told us she wanted us to live a life where we leave a legacy, one that could fill a Times newspaper obituary with so much content that people would be glad they knew you and proud of all you had achieved in your life. Sub-consciously I think I have been doing that for all these years in my Pharmacy.
When my Pharmacist dad passed away 25 years ago, patients came into the Pharmacy in their hundreds with cards of condolences and messages to say how kind he was to everyone. When I took over the Pharmacy in 2003, I knew that I wanted to leave a similar legacy for my patients too.
Over the years, as I have ‘grown-up’ with my patients there is an irreplaceable bond I have created with each and every one of my patients and I think this is one of the best parts of being a Community Pharmacist. The clue is in the job title, we are Pharmacists for our community!
As everyone will be sharing their stories today as the NHS turns 75, I wanted to share mine. Somehow, I know the press will focus on the Doctors and the Nurses, the hospitals and the GP practices and as always the valuable role Pharmacists, as the 3rd largest health care profession after Doctors and Nurses, play in the NHS will be subdued.
Yet for those patients in the know, who rely on their local Pharmacy and its team, I know they will be grateful we exist and have done for 75 years as part of the NHS.

I will never tire of telling everyone I meet about the invaluable role of Community Pharmacists and their teams! I will continue to talk to the press, Lords, Ministers, MPs and even Royalty until I see that my colleagues and I get the recognition we deserve as an integral and valued part of the NHS.

Over the last few years I have been fortunate to advocate for Community Pharmacy at a national level as a board member of the National Pharmacy Association and committee member of Community Pharmacy England (CPE). I have been involved in the NHS’s Fuller Stocktake, Hewitt Report, the UK Commission on Pharmacy leadership, the Royal Pharmaceutical Society’s Vision for Pharmacy professional practice and more recently CPE’s Vision for Community Pharmacy led by the Nuffield Trust and the Kings Fund. These opportunities have allowed me to be the community pharmacist in the ‘room’ who can share her grass-roots experiences and shape how Community Pharmacy develops and is further integrated within the NHS. Over the next few years, roles and opportunities like this will be key as the NHS evolves with all the issues it currently faces to become a modern and proactive health service.

As I reflect on over 75 years of being the ‘chemist’ on Erskine Road, I want to pay tribute to all the staff who have worked in the Pharmacy, past and present. The NHS can only achieve what it does because of the dedication, commitment and compassion of those who work as part of it.
Here’s to celebrating the NHS on its milestone and to many more years of service to come!




