Skip to content
Search

Latest Stories

GPhC updates guidance for pharmacies providing services online

The General Pharmaceutical Council (GPhC) has updated its guidance for registered pharmacy providing pharmacy service at a distance, including internet.

The guidance explains what pharmacy owners should consider before deciding whether any parts of their pharmacy service can be provided safely and effectively at a distance (including on the internet), rather than in the traditional face-to-face way.


Updates to the guidance, which was originally published in 2019, include:

  • providing additional examples, such as the types of collection and delivery services
  • further clarity around identity-checking of people using the service
  • aligning the guidance with prescribing guidance
  • updates following guidance produced by others, including the GMC

The Council said: “We are writing to pharmacy owners to ask them to review the updated guidance and make sure it is followed within their pharmacy. Everyone in the pharmacy team, including managers with delegated responsibility and the responsible pharmacist, should understand the guidance and be aware of their responsibilities to follow it.

“The guidance should be used alongside the standards for registered pharmacies, our inspection decision making framework and the standards for pharmacy professionals and its supporting guidance.”

During the interim review of the guidance, some stakeholders questioned why it was necessary for pharmacy websites to be ‘arranged so that a person cannot choose a prescription-only medicine (POM) and its quantity before there has been an appropriate consultation with a prescriber.’

The GPhC Council discussed this issue at its December meeting and agreed that this requirement provided an important safeguard for patients and the public using online services, and that it should remain in place. However, to provide clarity, the words ‘and its quantity’ have been removed in the updated version of the guidance.

The Council heard that its inspectors have observed the relative immaturity of operating models and prescribing practice in online pharmacies when compared to other types of providers, as well as under-developed clinical governance structures.

During inspections, inspectors identified examples of pharmacy governance models without the appropriate monitoring, after-care and safeguarding, and have taken appropriate action in response to protect patient safety.

In August 2021, the Council wrote to pharmacy organisations to highlight the serious patient safety concerns the regulator had identified relating to online prescribing services. These concerns include cases relating to registered pharmacies dispensing POMs from prescribers based in the EEA working alone or for third party online prescribing services.

“This is a fast-changing area, and it is important that we respond quickly and effectively to developments. We will continue to consider what further steps we should take to strengthen online pharmacy regulation, to help us to achieve our ten-year vision of safe and effective pharmacy care at the heart of healthier communities,” GPhC concluded.

More For You

Professor Sir Stephen Powis at a press briefing

Professor Sir Stephen Powis, was appointed national medical director of NHS England in 2018

NHS

NHS England’s top doctor to step down following Amanda Pritchard’s resignation

Just a week after NHS England chief executive Amanda Pritchard announced her resignation, the organisation’s national medical director, Professor Sir Stephen Powis, has confirmed he will step down this summer after more than seven years in the role.

In a statement released on Thursday, Professor Powis revealed that he had informed Pritchard of his intention to leave in a letter back in January.

Keep ReadingShow less
PDA calls on GP practices to use funding boost to improve job security for pharmacists

Now, it is time to focus on the community pharmacy contract

gettyimages

PDA urges GP practices to ensure funding boost supports employed pharmacists

The Pharmacists' Defence Association (PDA) has called on GP practicesto ensure that all healthcare professionals they employ, including pharmacists, benefit from the 7.2% funding boost they received under a newly agreed contract.

GP employers are encouraged to improve “job security, pay and conditions” for employees with this increased funding.

Keep ReadingShow less
Fourth Shift: Investment in Innovative Medicines Crucial for NHS 10-Year Plan Success

Medicines should be viewed as an investment rather than a cost

gettyimages

ABPI wants to see a ‘fourth shift’ in NHS 10-Year Health Plan


The Association of the British Pharmaceutical Industry (ABPI) has called on the government to increase investment in innovative medicines and vaccines, describing it as a crucial “fourth shift” necessary to ensure the NHS is fit for the future.

Keep ReadingShow less
Asda pharmacy launches UK’s first adult earache service

Asda makes ear health more accessible for everyone

gettyimages

Asda pharmacy launches £25 adult earache service

British supermarket chain Asda has launched the “UK’s first” adult earache service, aiming to reduce the burden on NHS services by eliminating the need for a GP appointment.

Priced at £25, the service allows patients aged 18 and over to book same-day appointments with qualified Asda pharmacists at any of its 226 pharmacies in England.

Keep ReadingShow less
Cat Smith MP Leads Call for Urgent Action

Health minister Wes Streeting

Pic credit: Getty Images

Urgent review into medicine shortages needed, ministers tell Streeting

Health minister Wes Streeting has been urged by 45 MPs to call an urgent review into medicine shortages that is impacting the health and safety of patients.

The news comes on the back of the death David Compton, a 44-year-old man who fell and suffered a heart attack which has been linked to him not being able to get medication for epilepsy.

Keep ReadingShow less