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Higher Level Practitioner Development: A Way Forward in the South East

Higher Level Practitioner Development: A Way Forward in the South East. BOPA Symposium 2007 Michael Powell Lead Pharmacist Mount Vernon Cancer Network. Aims. To outline the function of the Joint Programme Board

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Higher Level Practitioner Development: A Way Forward in the South East

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  1. Higher Level Practitioner Development: A Way Forward in the South East BOPA Symposium 2007 Michael Powell Lead Pharmacist Mount Vernon Cancer Network

  2. Aims • To outline the function of the Joint Programme Board • To describe the pharmacy practitioner development strategy as it relates to higher level practice • To describe current and likely future developments in higher level practice in the South East. How might these be relevant to oncology pharmacy practice?

  3. Why reform post-registration education? • No systematic provision of post grad education for pharmacy practitioners. • Level of current provision evolved in somewhat haphazard way from the need for a level of clinical pharmacist skills and knowledge not catered for by undergrad/pre-reg curricula

  4. Why reform post-registration education? • Foster Report (July 2006): • Re-emphasises the need for competence linked with performance assessment • Emphasises the need for re-validation: • Ongoing evaluation of an individual’s fitness to practice • Must be both formative and summative Department of Health. The regulation of the non-medical healthcare professions. A review by the Department of Health. July 2006.

  5. The Joint Programme Board (JPB): Membership and Function

  6. What is the JPB? Collaboration NHS Specialist Services Specialist groups Senior Managers Service Perspective Educational Quality Academia (SOPs) Brighton KCL Medway Portsmouth London UEA

  7. Key JPB Responsibilities • Develop uniform & coherent curricula for general and advanced practice • Develop tutor training courses to support work-based learning • Design reliable, fair & appropriate assessments • Undertake the accreditation of training centres • Build systems for on-going QA of E&T systems • Assign academic credits to programmes as appropriate • Issue statements of completion of training at general & advanced levels.

  8. To Date – Generalist Training Band 6 (3 years) • PG Diploma in General Pharmacy Practice (MI, Technical, Patient & Clinical Services plus “tasters” of specialist areas) • Validated by 5 of the JPB HEI’s • Statement of completion of general training • Currently 200 practitioners/students across the south-east

  9. JPB as a supportive infrastructure The NHS SPMs, Training Centres, Specialist Pharmacy Services HEIs Post-Registration Pharmacy Joint Programmes Board Training Centres (Gen + Specialist) Directors Pharmacy Education (Trust/Pan-Trust Roles) The NHS Pharmacy SIGs ?

  10. Developing the infrastructure – key principles • Work-based learning • Resources practice tutors • Assesses competence and performance • Systems for dealing with poor performance • Standardises approaches across specialties

  11. Training infrastructure support Higher Level Practice System PG enabling programmes Research Degree General Diploma Masters Adv Practice Higher Level Development Phase 2 Higher Level Development Phase 1 General Level Development Phase Consultant Practitioner Undergraduate & Pre-registration Phases Advanced Practitioner General Level Practitioner General Level Framework Higher Level Framework: Advanced & Consultant

  12. JPB (Regional e.g. South East England) Training Centres •Single Trusts or collaboratives – across health sectors •Accredited to deliver training at Generalist, Higher Level or both •Internal QA systems •Manage tutee experiences

  13. Higher Level Practice The Career Pathway

  14. Practitioner Development Strategy • Imperative to recognise formally that there are different levels of practice: • complex & diverse nature of pharmacist roles • Clinical governance • Impact of AfC D Webb et al. Hosp Pharm Mar 2004; 11: 104-109

  15. Practitioner Development Strategy • Different levels of practice must capture: • Clinical pharmacy specialisation (e.g. oncology) • Expertise in other disciplines (e.g. MI, tech services) • Should be sector independent: • Should encompass pharmacy practitioners within 1°/2° care and community pharmacy D Webb et al. Hosp Pharm Mar 2004; 11: 104-109

  16. JPB & Higher Level Practice • Focus now on developing strategy for higher level practitioner development • Scoping meetings held in London in January and May 2007 • Key themes: • Consistency • Overcoming silo mentality • Identifying barriers • Overcoming barriers • System of representation • Collaborations with HEIs • Time frames • Duality of award • Titles

  17. Practitioner development strategy: Alignment with AfC Band 8 b-d (3 yrs) Band 7 – 8a (3-5yrs) Higher Level Development Phase 2 Band 6 (3yrs) Higher Level Development Phase 1 General Level Development Phase Consultant Practitioner Undergraduate & Pre-registration Phases Advanced Practitioner General Level Practitioner General Level Framework Higher Level Framework: Advanced & Consultant

  18. Higher Level Practice Using the ACLF as the backbone

  19. Advanced & Consultant Level Framework (ACLF) • 34 competencies in 6 clusters: • Expert professional practice (EPP) • Building working relationships (BR) • Leadership (L) • Management (M) • Education, training & development (ETD) • Research & evaluation (RE) • Each competency has 3 levels of attainment: Foundation, excellence & mastery • In England, describes the competency profiles expected of applicants for consultant pharmacist posts

  20. Consultant profile EPP, BR and L at Mastery M, ETD and RE at Excellence Advanced profile 5 clusters at Excellence RE at Foundation PhwSI profile 4 clusters at Excellence 2 clusters ETD, RE optional Competency Profiles

  21. JPB – some key facts • JPB does not influence Specialist Group alliances or relationships • JPB is a system for discharging the curriculum – which belongs to the specialist group • JPB is an inclusive system – engages all SGs and all HEIs – promotes local relationships rather than aligning with one HEI. • Research commitment to final aspect (8b-d) requires local HEI engagement • Encourages all SGs to collaborate to standardise the output across specialities • JPBs must maintain a geographical relationship which builds on existing and historical networks.

  22. Accreditation • Clear recognition that JPB should work with specialist groups such as BOPA to: • Design the curricula for general & advanced level practice • Design appropriate assessment methods to meet the learning outcomes associated with general & advanced practice • Assessment of portfolio of evidence • Viva

  23. Latest Developments with the JPB Dr Catherine Duggan Associate Director of Clinical Pharmacy for Evaluation and Development &Senior Clinical LecturerLondon, Eastern and South East NHS and School of Pharmacy,University of London

  24. Further reading • Key literature on practitioner development: • Davies et al. Hosp Pharm Jan 04; 11: 2 • Webb et al. Hosp Pharm Mar 04; 11: 104-109 • Bates et al. Pharm J Mar 04; 272: 283 • Websites for further info: • JPB: www.postgraduatepharmacy.org • CoDEG: www.codeg.org

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