Skip to content
Search

Latest Stories

'Our vision for the future of pharmacy professional leadership'

By Paul Bennett

Today I’m proud to share with you the statement we submitted to the UK Commission on Pharmacy Professional Leadership in which we set out what professional leadership means to RPS.


I recognize we haven’t always been clear in communicating our ideas to members and our external stakeholders. Through the Commission, and our own Independent Review of member participation and communications, we are determined to remedy this.

We’re committed to lead pharmacy in the best interest of patients and the professions. This means that sometimes we will need to take difficult decisions. We will do the right thing for the long term, ultimately driving what’s best for patient care.

There are some key changes we believe are necessary to fulfil the profession’s ambitions.

To achieve a more unified approach to pharmacy leadership, we believe both pharmacists and pharmacy technicians should be represented by RPS within professional faculties that capitalize on the strengths of each discipline whilst retaining distinct professional voices.

Many of our members work with pharmacy technicians every day and know just how essential they are to their role and to patient care. We feel the same at RPS and it makes perfect sense to evolve into an organization where both professions can advance their scope of practice, working in alignment as part of the wider multi-professional team.

We will develop and implement post-registration curricula and credentialing for all pharmacists and pharmacy technicians working with patients and the public. To do this we will require formal delegation of authority by the GPhC.

This approach will give patients confidence in the profession to expand their scope of practice. It will also give pharmacists and pharmacy technicians confidence in themselves and each other. Critically it will give professionals a clearly mapped career path.

To reinforce professionalism, we want revalidation linked to these credentials so pharmacists and pharmacy technicians must demonstrate their competence at the level at which they actually practice. The ‘one size fits all’ approach to revalidation needs to change.

We want to see you progress in your career and believe financial reward from employers and organizations must be explicitly linked to your level of credentialed practice, so pharmacists and pharmacy technicians are rewarded accordingly.

We want to strengthen our reputation as a trusted, forward-looking, independent, professional leadership body, realizing a future that advances and supports pharmacists and pharmacy technicians to provide ever-improving excellence in patient care.

We will provide clear and authoritative advocacy and thought leadership that advances pharmacy practice and pharmaceutical science to create a cohesive professional pharmacy identity through communities and networks.

We are fully focused on building the future of the profession and will do this in partnership with you.

Paul Bennett is Chief Executive of the Royal Pharmaceutical Society (RPS).

More For You

Children’s dental health in crisis: considering the role of prevention and pharmacy

In the face of an ever-growing crisis in children’s dental health crisis, Bas Vorsteveld considers how pharmacists’ preventative intervention  can make a big difference…

Many of us know that oral health plays a hugely important role in our general health and wellbeing. We’re continuing to see a rise of cosmetic dentistry such as veneers and teeth whitening[1] but fundamentally, it shouldn’t be forgotten that oral health encompasses so much more than aesthetics. Our diets, the oral hygiene products we are using, and our brushing techniques are all elements that impact our oral health.

Keep ReadingShow less

Delivery Plan is a small step in the right direction – but community pharmacy needs a giant leap

By Malcolm Harrison

The Delivery Plan for Recovering Access to Primary Care was undeniably a vote of confidence in the sector. Whilst the plan was positioned as a package of measures to end the 8am GP scramble, the major announcements within the plan focused on community pharmacy.

Keep ReadingShow less

Self-Care: A solution for an overwhelmed health industry?

We must ensure that community pharmacists are recognised as self-care experts so that people turn to them as a first port of call, writes Bas Vorsteveld

Over the last few years, we’ve seen the aftermath of Covid-19, with the demand for consumer health products being unprecedented and unpredictable, placing pressure on supply chains and labour market. In turn, the industry has experienced acute shortages across the healthcare sector, placing huge pressure on pharmacists, doctors, nurses, and other healthcare professionals.

Keep ReadingShow less

TECHNOLOGY: Why invest in automation?

 By Cyrus Hodivala

Community pharmacies are located within the very hotspots of peoples’ communities, yet a staggering 720 individual businesses have stopped trading since 2015.  It has been called a “national disgrace and a betrayal to the elderly and the vulnerable” by sector leaders.

Keep ReadingShow less

AUTOMATION AND TECHNOLOGY: Pushing boundaries, taking risks

By James Tibbs

Our Totton branch has an incredibly high volume of original pack dispensing, roughly 45,000 items. As we became busier and busier in the dispensary we were finding that our  pharmacists, dispensers and other technicians simply didn’t have capacity to deliver the services that we needed them to.

Keep ReadingShow less