Title: PhwSI timeline
1PhwSI timeline
- September 06
- National PhwSI framework launched
- April 07
- New DH publications on commissioning and
accreditation of practitioners with special
interests (GPs, Pharmacists, Dentists) - July December 07
- Refresh of specialty-specific frameworks, led by
RCGP - PCC implementation support
- template portfolio
- October 07 events for early adopters
- From late 2007
- Individual pharmacists begin to develop towards
accreditation as PhwSIs?
2PhwSI press reactions..
3Who could provide care closer to home?
4PwSI Principles
- Revised GPwSI and PhwSI definition
- First and foremost a generalist
- Must be able to act without direct supervision
- The level of skill or competence will always
exceed the core competencies of the individuals
normal professional role - A qualification alone will never demonstrate
suitability for the role - Accredited PwSIs deliver clinical services
directly to patients and it is the personal
interaction and clinical relationship between a
PwSI and a patient, which makes accreditation
necessary
5PhwSIs what are they? The definition is now
shared with GPwSIs
A Pharmacist (or a GP) with a Special Interest
supplements their core generalist role by
delivering an additional high quality service to
meet the needs of patients. Working principally
in the community, they deliver a clinical service
beyond the scope of their core professional role
or may undertake advanced interventions not
normally undertaken by their peers. They will
have demonstrated appropriate skills and
competencies to deliver those services without
direct supervision.
6- The key to PhwSIs is that these roles are driven
by the need to redesign services in order to
improve access to care for patients, and to
improve the service they receive. -
- It is not a requirement for a PhwSI to be
qualified as a prescriber, but in practice this
may enhance the scope of the role. - They will normally practise across a locality,
PCT or within a clinical network. - As part of a local accreditation process, PhwSIs
will be expected to demonstrate competencies in
line with the generic competency framework
7The vision underpinning new publications on PwSI
commissioning and accreditation
- What does good clinical governance look like for
PwSI services? - Minimum necessary bureaucracy
- Not duplicating other regulatory processes
- Clear responsibilities for
- PwSI
- Commissioners
- Providers
- Accreditation bodies
8Implementing care closer to home convenient
quality care for patients
- A new series of updated and linked resources
published in April 07 - Part 1 an introduction to shifting services into
the community - Part 2 a step by step guide on the issues for
consideration when redesigning patient
pathways using PwSIs - Part 3 a nationally recognised accreditation
process for GPs and Pharmacists with
special interests - And links to updated guidelines for clinical
specialities, with competencies - All available at www.pcc.nhs.uk
9PCT Directions
PCTs shall have regard to the provisions set out
in Part 3 when commissioning, assessing or
accrediting a GP/PhwSI service
10Implementation timescales
- All existing GPwSIs be re-accredited by March
2009 - All new GPwSIs and PhwSIs be accredited in
accordance with these guidelines. - If the GPwSI or PhwSIs work is discontinued, or
if for any other reason after the commencement of
the service the individual is unable to use their
enhanced skills for a period longer than twelve
months, they should be re-accredited before they
work again as a GPwSI or PhwSI.
11What will the accreditation process involve?
12The Accreditors
- Subset of PCT and include, as a minimum
- Senior commissioner
- Senior professional rep (LMC, PEC, LPC, Lead
Pharmacist, GP from RCGP) - Lay person
- Senior clinician
- Supported by generic PhwSI competency framework
and updated specialty-specific guidance, where it
exists - May work across a number of PCTs
eg through Deanery model
13Local (PCT held) list
- All accredited GPwSIs and PhwSIs
- Length/dates of accreditation
- Specialty
- Available for public inspection
14What will PhwSI accreditation involve?
- Preparation of a portfolio of evidence which
is likely to include - Formal learning (eg University based specialist
course) - Applicants experience to date in the specialist
area - Learning through supervised practice (eg within
the specialised service) - Evidence of competence in core role
- A range of other relevant evidence
15PhwSIs - what do they offer for patients?
- More convenient and locally based care
- A wider choice of NHS services
- Pharmacy-based clinical care that is integrated
with other NHS clinicians - Services that can be carefully tailored to local
needs - Confidence that the NHS service offered is of at
least the same standard as when received from a
hospital or GP
16PhwSI whats the attraction for pharmacists?
- Formal recognition of advanced clinical practice
beyond the core pharmacy role - An opportunity to be commissioned to provide some
of NHS specialist services that will increasingly
be moved into primary care - Playing a key part within a local clinical
network - Greater security in the longer term if SLAs
specify PhwSI then this is the standard that
other providers must meet
17PhwSIs what about funding?
- There is no nationally agreed fee or remuneration
rate for services using PhwSIs this will be
locally negotiated - Possible new funding streams could be linked to
redesign of care pathways, to move care into
community settings - Some opportunities to present robust business
cases - Long term conditions
- Areas of need where here may be less interest
from GPs eg sexual health, substance misuse - To fill local gaps in primary care provision
18Specialty-specific frameworks in development may
include (tbc)
- GPwSIs
- Child protection
- Child and adolescent mental health
- Endoscopy (and similar procedures)
- ENT
- PhwSIs
- Dermatology
- Anticoagulation
- GPwSIs and PhwSIs
- Diabetes
- Substance misuse
- Sexual Health
- Care of older people
- Mental health
- Cardiology/CHD
- Musculoskeletal services
- Pain management
- Palliative care
- Respiratory medicine
- Learning disability
- Epilepsy
- Social exclusion
19- NHS Primary Care Contracting support for PwSI
implementation during 2007 - Updated specialty-specific frameworks
- Events to support early adopters and networking
- Development of support tools eg template
portfolio - Identify and share examples of best practice
through www.pcc.nhs.uk
Daily Mail 4.9.06
20Where can you find more information?
- A wide range of practical resources to support
PhwSI implementation is available at - www.pcc.nhs.uk/119.php
-
- These resources include
- The PhwSI competency framework
- A practical tool to to help practitioners explore
the potential that this model may offer for them - Links to other relevant resources such as updated
specialty guidance - Later in 2007, a template PhwSI portfolio
- The CPPE website signposts information on
specialist courses which may be relevant for
PhwSIs
21Some key questions for discussion today
- Where can PhwSIs really add value to NHS care?
- Could PhwSIs develop within clinical networks
across primary and secondary care, eg sexual
health, CHD? - Defining core roles vs more advanced roles
- Do we envisage services where all must be PhwSIs,
or where a few PhwSIs provide more complex care
and also support colleagues in core roles - Where and when will PCTs establish accreditation
processes in line with new requirements? - Getting the balance right a robust process but
avoiding bureaucracy or overkill