The NHS primary care recovery plan promised ‘interoperable digital solutions’ to support pharmacists to deliver clinical services and ‘significantly improve’ the digital infrastructure between general practice and community pharmacy.
This would include streamlined referral processes, giving community pharmacy additional access to relevant clinical information from GP records, and allowing community pharmacy to update GP records – for instance, following supply of oral contraception or a blood pressure consultation in community pharmacy.
Some of the £645m cash injection promised to the sector would be allocated to the project – but what would need to happen behind the scenes to enable pharmacy teams to deliver clinical services and manage patients’ records appropriately?
The Pharmacist spoke to Dan Ah-Thion, community pharmacy IT policy manager at Community Pharmacy England (formerly PSNC) to find out.
Community Pharmacy England and Mr Ah-Thion help to run the Community Pharmacy IT group, a collaboration which brings together system developers, NHS digital teams, pharmacy teams and all of those within the sector to explore lots of different ways to try to support and streamline pharmacy IT across healthcare.
What needs to change?
Patients often think that pharmacy teams have access to the information they need. ‘But when you’ve got your non-regular patients, you’re delivering a clinical service or there is a more serious situation, it becomes more important to have [information] beyond just your own dispensing record and have it easily available and usable,’ says Mr Ah-Thion.
Alongside their own patient dispensing records, all community pharmacists can access patients’ Summary Care Records – usually via a separate portal, although some system providers have introduced a ‘one-click-integration’. And in some areas pharmacists can access local Shared Care Records, also through a separate portal.
But with the introduction of more clinical services in the community, all community pharmacy professionals will need to be able to read information on patient records and write to GP records – for instance, following supply of oral contraception or a blood pressure consultation in community pharmacy.
‘Where pharmacy systems will update GP systems, we want our GP partners to get this information in a simple straight forward automatic way that is not going to create [added] workload,’ says Mr Ah-Thion.
Although healthcare information systems have come a long way since the days of pen and paper, in the past they have often had to be developed in silos, without an underlying common standard across the NHS records systems.
Even something as simple as a date of birth might not be recognised in the same way across different systems.
‘So you need to create and then use those building blocks,' says Mr Ah-Thion.
The first step in enabling systems to speak to each other is applying agreed common codes to fields that represent the same thing, like a date of birth.
‘Then any time a supplier has [that] code attached to a field, both systems will understand that means the date of birth,' explains Mr Ah-Thion.
To enable streamlined access to patient records, the Community Pharmacy IT group thinks that the NHS should create underlying standards based on the deepest level of information across any type of NHS patients’ record systems.
But while there is a common vison of what IT transformation could look like in the long term, ‘the reality might be about stepping stones along the way, where you get there bit by bit’, Mr Ah-Thion says.
GP Connect: A realistic next step
While the primary care recovery plan has not confirmed what technology would make up its ‘interoperable digital solutions’, an option which is likely to be considered could be linking pharmacy systems via GP Connect, which gives access to information within a patient’s GP record.
Mr Ah-Thion says that the potential use of GP Connect to enable interoperability would be ‘a sensible direction of travel’. ‘There is one national GP Connect programme, so that makes sense in the current environment. There might be an opportunity for a speedier integration with it – a quicker win.’
Rolling out GP Connect to community pharmacies would likely require some work by NHS IT teams, pharmacy IT suppliers and potentially by prescribing IT suppliers – and it is possible that some of the funding announced for IT improvements might be used so that NHS and supplier development teams can carry out any necessary work.
In the past, funding for IT updates has also been paid to pharmacy owners to enable them to buy into a new system or service.
Who will be able to access what – and have patients consented to this?
Pharmacy professionals – that is, pharmacists and pharmacy technicians – regulated under the General Pharmaceutical Council (GPhC) – will be the team members with access to patient records.
Most pharmacy professionals currently have access to Summary Care Records – which is being incorporated into the National Care Records Service. It gives access to information such as medication and allergies, but does not allow pharmacists to add information.
The detail of what changes will be made and what additional access will be given is still to be worked out – but the NHS Long Term Plan provides a ‘clear steer’ that pharmacy professionals need greater access to records, says Mr Ah-Thion.
‘It said the information that the clinician needs should be easily available for the clinician at the time they need it,' he adds.
Patients may need to consent to their health information being shared across different settings, and this will be factored into the development of the model before it is rolled out, says Mr Ah-Thion.
But he thinks it is likely to be well received by patients, who he says often expect their pharmacy clinicians to already have access to and be using the key information needed to carry out their care, and for the pharmacy to be able to update the GP. Patients report wanting to repeat themselves less about their information and wanting to receive safer care.
For instance, when pharmacy teams have to issue an emergency medicine supply to a new patient in the evening or weekend when the GP surgery is closed, they might ask a patient for permission to check their record to ensure the medication is right or see if it has been previously prescribed.
‘The common response is: "what's going on? Why haven’t you got that already?" Because patients are thinking: actually, if you don't have that, how can you care for me in the best way?’ says Mr Ah-Thion.
Any iteration of technological change will be tested to ensure it works for clinicians, patients and providers.
But Mr Ah-Thion says that members of the IT group are ‘excited by the ambition of the plan’ and pleased that digital solutions are being incorporated.
‘The primary care recovery plan seems to have a recognised the importance of IT, which we welcome,’ he says.
Have your say
Please add your comment in the box below. You can include links, but HTML is not permitted. Please note that comments are not moderated before publication and the views expressed are those of the user and do not reflect the views of The Pharmacist. Remember that submission of comments is governed by our Terms and Conditions. You can also read our full guidelines on article comments here – but please be aware that you are legally liable for any libellous or offensive comments that you make. If you have a complaint about a comment or are concerned that a comment breaches our terms and conditions, please use the ‘Report this comment’ function to alert our web team.