The General Pharmaceutical Council (GPhC) has developed new draft Standards for Chief Pharmacists to strengthen pharmacy governance.
It has set out the professional responsibilities as well as described the knowledge, conduct, and performance required by a chief pharmacist (or equivalent) to
support their organisation and its staff to deliver "safe and effective" pharmacy services.
The pharmacy regulator has also launched a consultation to find out what patients, carers, and members of the public think about the new draft standards.
Participants can share their views "if there are any settings in which the standards could not be applied or met and any positive or negative impacts of the
proposals," it said.
The survey will open for 12 weeks, from 23 January to 16 April 2024.
The General Pharmaceutical Council (GPhC) has launched a new draft 'Equality Guidance' for pharmacies to tackle discrimination and make sure that everyone can access safe and effective person-centred pharmacy care.
GPhC's consultation is seeking views on "the structure and language of the guidance, if anything is missing and the impacts on patients and members of the public, pharmacy staff, pharmacy owners, and individuals or groups sharing any of the protected characteristics."
The regulator said the draft guidance is designed to support pharmacy owners to:
demonstrate that they are meeting our standards for registered pharmacies
fulfil their legal and regulatory duties in relation to equality
help protect the rights of individuals
advance equal opportunities for staff, patients and the wider public
help improve the experience and healthcare outcomes of patients and members of the public.
The professional leadership body for pharmacists has urged the General Pharmaceutical Council's (GPhC) to make it mandatory to have a chief pharmacist within
organisations to ensure transparency for patients, the public and pharmacy staff.
On 23 January, the GPhC launched a consultation seeking views on the new draft Standards for Chief Pharmacists it has developed to strengthen pharmacy governance.
These standards outlined the professional responsibilities and qualifications required by a chief pharmacist to support their organisation and its staff to deliver
"safe and effective" pharmacy services.
The pharmacy regulator highlighted the importance of having a registered chief pharmacist meeting these standards in hospitals (or relevant settings) to benefit
from the new legislation regarding accidental errors.
In response to the consultation, the RPS expressed that while meeting these standards could enhance pharmacy governance, they may not provide the framework needed
to fully support staff in reporting and learning from errors.