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GP practices now eligible for pharmacist training funding

GP practices now eligible for pharmacist training funding

GP practices and primary care networks (PCNs) will be able to employ pharmacist trainees from 2025, making them eligible for the recently-updated NHS England (NHSE) pharmacist training grant.

While some GP practices and PCNs have already hosted pharmacist trainees for part of their placement, this has been administered under a memorandum of understanding with community and hospital pharmacy employers.

But in a webinar hosted yesterday by the Primary Care Pharmacy Association (PCPA), with representatives from NHSE, it was announced that GP practices and PCNs would now be classified as a pharmacist ‘patient-facing setting’.

This makes GP practices and PCNs eligible to be the lead employer for pharmacist trainees under requirements from the General Pharmaceutical Council (GPhC).

Under newly harmonised funding arrangements announced by NHSE, GP practices and PCNs will therefore receive £26,500 per training post as a contribution towards training, including employment costs, as well as having access to an NHSE-funded training course.

Community and hospital pharmacy employers will be eligible for the same funding.

Health and justice settings will also be recognised as a patient facing setting, and be eligible for the same funding.

GP practices and PCNs intending to employ pharmacist trainees must upload their training programme and how they will meet training requirements to ORIEL – NHSE’s recruitment platform – by 1 March.

PCPA president and pharmacist GP partner Graham Stretch told Pulse’s sister title The Pharmacist that the changes felt like ‘a massive step forward’ for the sector.

And he encouraged the profession to see it as a positive change despite any logistical challenges that may arise.

‘I do recognise there are challenges, that we’re going to as a profession have to work around, but the benefits to the profession of everyone becoming a prescriber, should I hope for everyone be a pretty obvious win here,’ Mr Stretch said.

He added that he still expected that community, general practice and hospital pharmacy employers would work together to fulfil the training requirements for each student, including access to a designated prescribing practitioner (DPP) and to a dispensary, even before multi-sector placements become mandatory from 2026.

And he noted that dispensaries within a GP practice that are not a registered pharmacy would not be eligible to provide the dispensary part of the training.

He added: ‘Anything that improves integration, that’s got to be a good thing to everybody.’

And he suggested that PCNs acting as the lead employer ‘and then sort of seconding their employed trainee to GP sites, to community pharmacy sites, and indeed to hospital sites feels to me like the end game here for primary care’.

‘And who knows, maybe it will just be that last piece that we need to properly start to integrate community pharmacy into PCN networks,’ he said.

The PCPA also shared a response from GPhC chief executive Duncan Rudkin, posted on X, which said: ‘There should be no barriers to regarding general practice and primary care networks as patient-facing and therefore enabling these to be the “lead employer” for the purpose of Foundation Training.’

A version of this story was first published by Pulse’s sister title The Pharmacist


          

READERS' COMMENTS [1]

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Not on your Nelly 12 January, 2024 11:05 am

how about funding us to train what our main aim is ie GPs? and pour money into that. Pharmacist can then train pharmacist and nurses can train nurses. Interesting idea?