Pharmacists continue to be the most popular role employed through the additional roles reimbursement scheme, latest monthly primary care workforce figures indicate.

The NHS Digital data reports from the National Workforce Reporting Service (NWRS) submissions to give a picture of ARRS primary care network (PCN) staff across England.

And its latest data set released this month showed pharmacists were once again the most employed role, with an extra 33 full-time-equivalent (FTE) pharmacists employed in December 2024.

According to the NWRS monthly figures, there are now 5,494 FTE pharmacists and 375 FTE advanced pharmacist practitioners working in PCNs in England. There were also 1,977 FTE pharmacy technicians employed.

This represents a slight increase from the number of pharmacist and pharmacy technicians roles in PCNs in December 2023, when there were 5,107 FTE pharmacists and 1,813 FTE pharmacy technicians.

While this latest data set shows the practice pharmacist workforce in England has increased by 7.5% between December 2023 and December 2024, it had grown by 32% in the year before.

This comes after earlier figures suggested that recruitment of practice pharmacist and other ARRS roles was slowing and as GP practice sound the alarm over struggling to recruit pharmacists.

The latest data report also showed that FTE advanced pharmacist practitioner numbers dropped slightly - from 381 in December 2023 to 375 in December 2024. Though this was still higher than the 330 in PCNs in 2022.

ARRS role FTE roles employed by PCNs in December 2024 Change from previous quarter
Pharmacists 5,494 Up
Care Coordinators 4,813 Up
Social Prescribing Link Workers
(Non-Mental Health Practitioners)
2,777 Up
Pharmacy Technicians 1,977 Up
Physiotherapists 1,645 Up
General Practice Assistants 1,269 Up
Paramedics 1,176 Down
Physician Associates 1,147 Down
Health and Wellbeing Coaches 1,043 Up
Nursing Associates 511 Up
Advanced Nurse Practitioners
* some PCNs may be reporting Enhanced Nurse Practitioners under this role, as well as Advanced Clinical Practitioner Nurses, as neither is separately captured within NWRS, though both are ARRS roles.
501 Up
Mental Health and Wellbeing Practitioners (Mental Health Practitioners) 459 Down
Trainee Nursing Associates 451 Down
Advanced Pharmacist Practitioners 375 Down
Digital and Transformation Leads 262 Up
Advanced Paramedic Practitioners 233 Up
Therapists (Non-Mental Health Practitioners) 202 Same
Salaried GPs * Includes salaried GP workforce relating to PCN extended access DES and ARRS 176 Up
Dieticians 129 Down
Advanced Physiotherapist Practitioners 100 Same
Social Prescribing Link Workers (Mental Health Practitioners) 96 Same
Podiatrists 47 Same
Community Mental Health Nurses (Mental Health Practitioners) 57 Up
Therapists (Mental Health Practitioners) 14 Down
Advanced Occupational Therapist Practitioners (Non-Mental Health Practitioners)] 12 Same
Advanced Dietician Practitioners 5 Same
Advanced Podiatrist Practitioners 3 Same
Applied Psychologists – Clinical (Mental Health Practitioners) 2 Same
Trainee Mental Health and Wellbeing Practitioners (Mental Health Practitioners) 2 Up
Social Workers (Mental Health Practitioners) 1 Same
Peer Support Workers (Mental Health Practitioners) 1 Same
Trainee Clinical Associates in Psychology (Mental Health Practitioners) 0 Same
Advanced Occupational Therapist Practitioners (Mental Health Practitioners) 0 Same
Clinical Associates in Psychology (Mental Health Practitioners) 0 Same
Other - Roles under the 'Other' Direct Patient Care category may contain roles which PCNs can claim ARRS funding for, but are not yet reported on within this publication. 407 Down

All figures are full-time equivalent.

*While all the above roles from the primary care network workforce statistics are reimbursable under ARRS, NHS England has not confirmed whether the FTE numbers have been claimed for under the scheme.

Our sister title Pulse PCN also reports on the quarterly primary care workforce figures, which alongside the self-reported NWRS submissions includes ARRS claims data, so may vary from the figures reported here.

A version of this article first appeared in our sister title Pulse PCN.