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Wales follows rest of UK with independent prescribing
Wales follows rest of UK with independent prescribing
Date published:
20/01/2006
Pharmacists and nurses are to be allowed to prescribe certain
drugs in Wales, following similar plans that are to be introduced in England
and Scotland. Pharmacists will be able to prescribe licensed medicines with the
exception of controlled drugs, allowing patients to obtain treatment earlier
and those with chronic diseases such as diabetes and coronary heart disease to
be supported in managing their conditions
Welsh health minister Dr
Brian Gibbons said: "Independent prescribing will mean that suitably qualified
nurses and pharmacists will not only be able to offer advice on health
promotion and management of chronic conditions but also be able to prescribe
independently for their patients in hospital and community
settings.
"This is an important change to the way we deliver healthcare
services and will build on the foundations already in place where nurse and
pharmacist supplementary prescribers are already running for example diabetes
and coronary heart disease clinics."
David Pruce, director of practice
and quality improvement at the Royal Pharmaceutical Society, speaking on BBC
Radio Four's You and Yours described how the change could lead to GP surgeries
appearing in pharmacists. He said: "You often get pharmacies within health
centres so there's nothing to stop it going the other way. It would depend very
much on what the market wants and that's one idea amongst many that are being
floated."
John D'Arcy, chief executive of the
National Pharmacy
Association, said on the same programme: "Pharmacy as a profession has been
frustrated for years. "The training they get equips them with a much broader
healthcare training than has been recognised in practice, so we welcome the
idea of putting those skills into practice."
"So what pharmacies will
be doing, they'll be the healthcare centre on the high street. People can go
in, yes they can get access to their medicines either on prescription over the
counter, but they can also pick up on a range of other services, diagnostic
services, testing services, sexual health services, drug misuse, the list goes
on."
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