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Ian J Cubbin 19 th November 2015
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The start of it all……. 1815 Apothecaries Act The Act introduced compulsory apprenticeship and formal qualifications for apothecaries, in modern terms- general practitioners, under the license of the Society of Apothecaries. It was the beginning of regulation of the medical profession in the UK. The Act required instruction in anatomy, botany, chemistry, materia medica and “physic”, in addition to six months' practical hospital experience.
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Early progress in Pharmacy Education 1841 Pharmaceutical Society of Great Britain 1842 The College of the Pharmaceutical Society founded in Bloomsbury 1849 The School of Pharmacy became independent and was incorporated into University of London 1849 Liverpool School of Pharmacy founded
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How did it feel? Early members were mostly members of the Livery company Compounding was the fundamental part and required an apprenticeship Expansion of the industry- Beecham, Burroughs Wellcome The experts in drugs-mainly in the community
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Post 1948 Qualifications were varied-but all required a 3 year practical apprenticeship Dispensing assistants (one year qualification from Apothecaries Hall often taught at independent Schools of Pharmacy) Chemists and Druggists (two year qualification, having passed the “Minors”)-many also became Dispensing Opticians (one year further study) Pharmaceutical Chemists (three year qualifications, having passed the “Majors’) Bachelor of Pharmacy graduates
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1960s- A graduate profession Regulation abolished Apprenticeships MPS -Minors FPS - Majors Universities and Polytechnics offered a bachelors degree followed by a one year pre-registration training. Bradford Model-a sandwich course
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The registration examination Initially the postgraduate training simply involved having a pre-registration tutor who ‘signed you off’ as competent after 12 months. Very variable levels of competence, as much to do with the tutor as the student The RPSGB introduced its pre-registration examination in 1991 and the format has remained unchanged for 25 years.
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Format and Style of the Exam 2 papers, all multiple choice in 4 different formats Closed book in the morning-90 minutes 90 questions Open book in the afternoon 150 minutes 80 questions The open book exam included 20 calculation questions and calculators not permitted. The approved texts were Drug Tariff, Medicines Ethics and Practice Guide and the British National Formulary Pass mark 70% in both the calculations and the other questions.
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The Master of Pharmacy degree The teaching of pharmacy in the undergraduate programme changed radically when in 1997 the 4 year programme was introduced. Consequences were varied- a fallow year of graduates was followed by a fallow year of pharmacists (2001). Overhauling of programmes varied in Schools of Pharmacy
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Separation of Roles-September 2010 Royal Pharmaceutical Society of Great Britain Now the membership body, supporting pharmacists and the development of the profession though a range of activities General Pharmaceutical Council Now the regulator of the profession, charged with ensuring patient safety. Registers both pharmacists and pharmacy technicians
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Standards Standards for Continuing Professional Development (2010) Standards for the initial education and training of pharmacy technicians (2010) Standards for the initial education and training of pharmacists (2011) and Non-EEA pharmacists wishing to register in UK (2011) Standards of conduct, ethics and performance (2012) And standards of premises
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Patient Safety This is the cornerstone of the work of the GPhC. In October 2014 the GPhC began to review the Code of Conduct in the light of the Mid-Staffordshire and other reports The outcome is yet to be published.
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Registration with the GPhC Still a two part process after gaining MPharm degree or completing the Overseas Pharmacist Course Pre-registration period with satisfactorily completed competencies Passing pre-registration examination often seen as the final hurdle 4 years ago the Board of Examiners began the first substantial overhaul of the assessment since it started
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Guiding Principles On Day 1 the pharmacist must be SAFE. The assessment should have as much artificiality as possible removed The Board do NOT have responsibility for the training programme Setting a syllabus no longer relevant, demonstration of competence important
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What about Mathematics? Evidence suggested that the 20 questions in the Open book section of assessment was no longer appropriate. Practicing pharmacists decried the absence of a calculator, saying it was unrealistic in the 21 st Century The Board of Assessors commissioned work on the subject From June 2016 the format of the calculations section of the Assessment will be radically different
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Paper 1 June 2016 Calculations Paper Calculators permitted-candidates must bring their own and it must be one of THREE manufacturer types 40 questions 2 hours Written answers only- not MCQ units provided
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Paper 2 June 2016 “Clinical” paper No calculators, but simple calculations may occur 120 questions 2.5 hours No reference texts-but reference material may be provided for some questions e.g. extracts from BNF MCQ and eMCQ questions only
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Life Expectancy of the New Exam The last one lasted 25 years! Until the integrated 5 year programme? Fit for purpose because it focuses on the barely passing candidate-not the borderline candidate. Who will be blamed if the success rates drop?
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Some observations from the inside Preceptors or pre-registration tutors can influence the future pharmacists in a way that academics rarely do Are we dealing with selection or recruitment? What impact would a 5 year integrated degree have? What about OSCEs (at any level)?
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And finally…… Thank you for allowing me to share these personal observations
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