With clear benefits for residents and the NHS, this project raises the question whether NHS commissioners should routinely commission clinical pharmacy services within the care home setting? 1. Care Quality Commission. Guidance about compliance – Essential Standards for Quality and Safety. March 2010 2. Barber, ND et al 2009. Care Homes’ use of medicines study: prevalence causes and potential harm of medication errors in care homes for older people Jane Portlock1, Dave Brown2,
Paul Rutter3 1UCL School of Pharmacy, London, UK, 2University of Portsmouth, Portsmouth, UK, 3University of Wolverhampton, RAD001 clinical trial Wolverhampton, UK A qualitative investigation was carried out to determine if Innovators and barriers to innovation could be characterised. The key determinants of successful innovation identified in this study seemed to be the personal characteristics selleck inhibitor of the Innovators and the presence of an appropriate skill mix among the pharmacy staff. Innovators demonstrated an energy and ability
to overcome barriers in developing a new service. In the UK, there is recognition at government level that community pharmacists could make a significant contribution to improving the public’s health and of the need further to integrate pharmacies into the wider public health workforce. The role community pharmacy could play in supporting public health through becoming healthy living pharmacies (HLPs) has been described in the literature. The original intention of HLPs was that pharmacy teams would promote and support healthy living and health literacy, offer patients and the public healthy lifestyle advice, support self-care, treat minor ailments and support patients with long-term conditions.(1). The aim of this research was to
explore the views of pharmacists who had made innovations in practice which could feature in an HLP on the barriers to innovation and the determinants of innovative practice. Case studies from pharmacies around the 3-mercaptopyruvate sulfurtransferase UK were collected by systematic review of the literature. The term innovative practice was used to describe those pharmacies where one or more activities within a pharmacy and/or the ethos and performance of the entire pharmacy were regarded as exemplary and exemplified HLPs (2). Recognition of barriers has been shown to help support and enhance innovation. Therefore, it was considered useful to record the barriers to innovation which were identified by these Innovators. The interviewee identification process was carried out using an ‘opportunistic’ sampling strategy based on reports from colleagues, peers, organisations (e.g. PSNC, NPA and others) and the key literature.