Title: Prescribing Rights Nonmedical Qualified Practitioners
1 Prescribing Rights Non-medical Qualified
Practitioners
- Robert Hallworth, BSc., MRPharmS, ILTM
- Specialist Pharmaceutical Adviser Stockport
Primary Care Trust
2Aim of session
- To provide an overview of developments in
extended prescribing by non-medical healthcare
professionals
3What are the currently available prescribing
mechanisms?
4Prescribing Mechanisms
- Patient Specific Directions
- Patient Group Directions
- Exemptions under Medicines legislation
- Extended Formulary Nurse Prescribing
- Supplementary Prescribing (nurses and pharmacists)
5Patient Group Directions (PGD)
Definition A written instruction for the
sale,supply and/or administration of named
medicines in an identified clinical situation. It
applies to groups of patients who may not be
individually identified before presenting for
treatment
6Who can supply medicines on a Patient Group
Direction?
7Patient Group Directions
- Nurses
- Midwives
- Health Visitors
- Paramedics
- Optometrists
- Chiropodists
- Radiographers
- Orthoptists
- Physiotherapists
- Pharmacists
- Dietitians
- Occupational Therapists
- Prosthetists
- Speech Therapists
8Patient Group Directions
- To PGD or not to PGD? that is the question
- www.npc.co.uk/npc_pubs.htm
9Independent Prescribing by Nurses
- District Nurses and Health Visitors - limited
formulary, over 25,000 nurses (V100) - Nurse Prescribers Formulary for District Nurses
and Health Visitors - Mainly appliances, dressings and a few medicines
- Extended Formulary Nurse Prescribers (V200)
10Nurse Prescribers Extended Formulary
- Currently four broad areas (80 conditions)
- Minor illness
- Minor injury
- Health promotion
- Palliative care
- Potential new category emergency care and first
contact care - Nurse Prescribers Extended Formulary
- All pharmacy and GSL medicines for these
conditions - 180 POMs / more POMs to be added
11Ability to Influence Decisions
- Consultation on the formulary currently led by
the Department of Health - Input from working groups, professional
organisations - Committee meets every 6 months
12What is Supplementary Prescribing?
13Definition
Supplementary Prescribing A voluntary
prescribing partnership between the independent
prescriber and a supplementary prescriber, to
implement an agreed patient-specific clinical
management plan with the patients agreement.
14Aim of Supplementary Prescribing
- To maximise benefit to patients and the NHS,
through increased flexible use of workforce skills
15Supplementary Prescribing
Introduced through POM Order amendment and NHS
regulations in April 2003
Nurses (V300) and pharmacists
Will assist continuing care, rather than one-off
episode of care e.g. asthma, diabetes, other
chronic disease, mental health
16Criteria
- Independent prescriber must be a doctor makes
diagnosis and reviews patient at pre-determined
intervals - Independent prescriber can at any time review the
patients condition or resume full responsibility
for the patients care - Supplementary prescriber must be a Registered
Nurse, Registered Midwife or Registered
Pharmacist - Written Clinical Management Plan specific to a
named patient and the patients condition - Good communication between the independent and
supplementary prescriber - Both prescribers need access to a common patient
record
17Medicines
- Not proposed to restrict range of medicines,
except - Controlled Drugs (6 CDs available for palliative
care for independent prescribers) - Unlicensed medicines, with the exception of
paediatric care
18Clinical Management Plan - Templates
- Patient specific
- State condition to be treated
- Start and review date
- Name of independent prescriber
- Name of supplementary prescriber
- Refer to the class or description of medicines to
be prescribed
19Training and Preparation
- Taught element
- 26 days with some flexibility of delivery and
APEL - Practice-based
- 12 days (24 half days)
- Mentored by prescriber (DMP)
- (Face-to-face contact, but provision now also for
some open and distance learning some e-learning
now being developed)
20Funding for Training
- Course fees will be funded by DH and paid
directly to education providers by Strategic
Health Authority (SHA) - There is no funding available for replacement
costs needs to be covered by the organisation - Also no funding for mentors may need other
incentives - Small amount of funding to SHA for provision of
advice and support project management - Agreed until 2006
21Selection District Nurses and Health Visitors
- Initially district nurses and health visitors
higher grades - Treatment room nurses as a result of starter
pack initiative
22Selection Nurse Practitioners
- Allied to PMS bid
- Criteria diploma or degree / 3 years
post-registration - Meeting with practice
- What is a nurse practitioner? / Role and
commitment / Mentoring
23Supplementary Prescribing
Supplementary Prescribing is to be extended to
some AHPs
Physiotherapists Podiatrists Radiographers
and Optometrists
24Current Position
- Nurses in training since January 2003
- 1300 nurse supplementary prescribers qualified
already - Pharmacists in training from September 2003
first cohort qualified March 2004
25Research
- Department of Health has already commissioned
evaluation of the extended / independent nurse
prescribing - Further research to follow when there are
sufficient qualified supplementary prescribers
26Conclusions
- Mechanisms that will assist emergency care and
one-off episodes of care - PGDs for supply and administration of medicines
- Exemptions for sale and supply, under the
Medicines Act - Nurse Prescribers Extended Formulary
- Continuing care and chronic disease
Supplementary prescribing