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Prevention

02/08/2018 By Michael Holden Leave a Comment

NICE Guidance on promoting health and wellbeing in Community Pharmacies

NICE have launched this guidance – Community Pharmacies: promoting health and wellbeing.

It is important that pharmacy owners, pharmacists and pharmacy teams, particularly Health Champions, and local commissioners of both health and wellbeing services understand what the recommendations are and what this means for them.

Overview

This guideline covers how community pharmacies can help maintain and improve people’s physical and mental health and wellbeing, including people with a long-term condition. It aims to encourage more people to use community pharmacies by integrating them within existing health and care pathways and ensuring they offer standard services and a consistent approach. It requires a collaborative approach from individual pharmacies and their representatives, local authorities and other commissioners.

Summary of key recommendations

  1. Local commissioners, Health & Wellbeing Boards, community pharmacies and their representatives (e.g. LPCs) should work to integrate community pharmacy into existing care and referral pathways as health and wellbeing hubs.
  2. Interventions should be focused on local needs, be consistently of high quality, tailored to the individual, use professionally produced support materials and pharmacy team members delivering them should have the right skills and knowledge, e.g. in line with NICE guidance on behaviour change.
  3. Local commissioners should promote community pharmacy as an integral part of NHS primary care services.
  4. Community pharmacies should publicise their skills and services to increase the public’s knowledge and confidence in those services.
  5. Community pharmacies should proactively seek opportunities to promote people’s physical and mental health and wellbeing. This includes raising awareness, providing information, advice and support, and signposting or referral to and from other services. This could happen when responding to requests for advice, selling OTC medicines or supplying prescription medicines and supporting a patient with a long-term condition such as diabetes or hypertension. The brief interventions could include the self-management of mild to moderate back pain, physical activity, smoking, healthy weight and diet, and alcohol consumption. A minimum dataset should be used to capture these interventions and referrals.

What does this mean for community pharmacies?

We believe that the guidance is a very good fit with the objectives and ethos of the Healthy Living Pharmacy (HLP) model which we have supported since its conception. So those pharmacies that are already accredited HLPs and maintained their capability and activity in line with the HLP Criteria will be well placed to meet most or all of these recommendations.

At Pharmacy Complete we have gone beyond the core HLP criteria with our award-winning Health Champion development programme that we have created for pharmacy teams which includes our Knowledge into Action workshop, the RSPH Applied award in Health Improvement and the Supporting Behaviour Change Level 2 award plus Making Every Contact Count (MECC). We have also developed our Health Campaign service which uses only evidence-based, professional materials plus a topic knowledge piece and hints and tips to support the provision of the required minimum of six campaigns a year.

There will undoubtedly be some work for local public health, NHS and CCG commissioners to do on the integration and publicity recommendations; LPCs and Local Healthwatch should be holding them to account on this.

Filed Under: Healthy Living Pharmacy News, Pharmacy Complete News, Viewpoint Tagged With: Community pharmacy, Health Champions, Healthy Living Pharmacy, HLP, Prevention, Public Health

17/07/2017 By Michael Holden Leave a Comment

Beyond QPS?

The direction of travel indicated by the NHS Five Year Forward View, government policies and consumer expectations is clear – it’s based on high quality, efficient and effective clinical care in health and wellbeing.

As part of the imposed community pharmacy funding arrangements the government included a Quality Payments Scheme consisting of 4 Gateway Criteria and 8 Quality Criteria. The scheme, which aims to drive up consistency of quality and value of pharmacy services comes with a £75million budget taken out of current funding so would be a further loss to contractors beyond the existing cuts if not achieved.

Initial information indicates that the majority of contractors in England claimed at least some of the quality criteria thus presuming that the Gateway Criteria were also met. As yet, no detail is available on who and which criteria were claimed for.

What to do now?

Having worked hard to achieve some or all of the criteria, it is now about leveraging that and understanding local needs and priorities is a great place to start. The Joint Strategic Needs Assessment (JSNA) and Pharmaceutical Needs Assessment (PNA) highlight these for you and will be hosted on most CCG and Local Authority websites. Another place to look is the Health Profiles website, these provide a snapshot of local needs and hence opportunities for pharmacy campaigns, interventions and services.

Opening dialogue with local CCGs and Local Authority Public Health commissioners is also important, particularly for LPCs who have a key role in driving new services for their contractors.

All of the Quality Criteria are important but perhaps some more than others on which to build a healthier future for your pharmacy and your community. Achieving Healthy Living Pharmacy (HLP) status is but the beginning and should be the platform for the development of a future professional business model based on an effective workforce, community engagement and a professional pharmacy environment. The Dementia Friend criterion also adds to team skills.

Patient Safety is also a critical element of the criteria with safeguarding, clinical effectiveness (asthma management) and effective use of the Summary Care Record.

Ensure that your local population, other health and wellbeing providers and local commissioners understand what you do by keeping NHS Choices and NHS111directory of services up-to-date.

What next?

Most people believe that the QPS is here to stay but, given the drivers in the landscape, there is a natural evolutionary pathway. Once some of the criteria are bedded down one could imagine them transferring into the Essential Services specifications and being replaced with others. Workforce capabilities may include making every contact count, behavioural change or mental wellbeing; clinical effectiveness may focus on T2 diabetes, hypertension or high-risks medicines; prevention criteria maybe introduce on lifestyle-related health risks such as smoking, healthy diet and healthy weight, alcohol, physical activity or hypertension and AF-related stroke risks.

Conclusions

Whilst this is a very challenging time for community pharmacy, particularly in England, the landscape will continue to change and the pace will only accelerate so the sooner we embrace it and adapt to it the more likely we are to achieve a healthier future.

Filed Under: Viewpoint Tagged With: HLP, Prevention, QPS, Quality

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