Practice pharmacists in the primary healthcare team in Aotearoa New Zealand: a national survey
Janet McDonald 1 * , Caroline Morris 2 , Tara N. Officer 3 , Jacqueline Cumming 1 , Jonathan Kennedy 2 , Lynne Russell 1 , Eileen McKinlay 4 , Mona Jeffreys 11
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3
4
Abstract
The integration of pharmacists into general practice settings is increasingly common internationally. Within Aotearoa New Zealand, the role has evolved variably in different regions. Recent health policy and professional guidance support further development.
To describe the current status of pharmacists working in primary healthcare settings other than community pharmacy.
An online survey of all pharmacists in Aotearoa New Zealand primary healthcare settings was conducted in 2022, and covered employment, current services, patient consultations, relationships with other health professionals, and service costs and benefits. Descriptive statistical analyses were performed.
Responses from 39 pharmacists (~35% response rate) working in primary healthcare practice roles are reported. Most were female (84%), New Zealand European (81%), and 45% had <5 years’ experience in this setting. The most common service provided was responding to medicines information queries from other health professionals (87%). Most also offered one or more medicines management services: medicines use review (44%), medicines therapy assessment (62%), and medicines optimisation (69%). One-third were prescribing or repeat prescribing pharmacists; non-prescribers expressed strong interest in future prescribing roles. Most (86%) undertook patient consultations with varied capacity to do more. Key perceived benefits for patients included improved health outcomes and medicines understanding; benefits for the health services included supporting the workloads of busy primary healthcare staff.
Practice pharmacists have both patient- and practice-facing roles. The proportion with a prescribing qualification has increased over time. There is some capacity for additional consultations, but this requires funding, space and time spent in a service/setting.
Keywords: Aotearoa New Zealand, clinical pharmacists, cross-sectional survey, general practice, pharmacists, practice pharmacists, primary health care.
WHAT GAP THIS FILLS |
What is already known: The integration of pharmacist roles into primary health care, including general practice, is growing in Aotearoa New Zealand, with geographical variation. Recent health policy and professional guidance support further development of these roles. |
What this study adds: There are more pharmacist prescribers in primary health care than there were in 2018, with strong interest in future prescribing roles, yet barriers to further expansion remain. Employers need to ensure that primary healthcare-based pharmacists are well supported in their role by other practice staff and that appropriate infrastructure is in place to facilitate this. |
Introduction
Most pharmacists internationally work in community pharmacy settings. However, in recent years, there has been much exploration, discussion and appetite for the integration of pharmacists into general practice in many jurisdictions, including in the United Kingdom (UK),1–3 Australia,4–6 Canada7 and the United States.8,9 The speed at which the role has developed has varied; it is currently well-established in the UK.10,11
Pharmacist roles in general practice can include individual patient care (eg medicines education and optimisation), providing support for other clinicians (eg medicines information) and undertaking practice-level activities such as medicines audits.4,9 Extant evidence suggests that pharmacist services in general practice are highly effective; for example, in improving medicines adherence and some clinical outcomes for patients, reducing prescribing errors and easing workload pressures in general practice.12–14
In Aotearoa New Zealand (NZ), the ‘practice pharmacist’ role has experienced ad hoc regional development, with some areas enjoying greater local support and investment in the role. In mid-2019, the role scope became explicit at a professional strategic level, with the Pharmacy Council NZ (PCNZ) publishing a position statement on expectations for pharmacists practising clinically in general practice.15 A toolkit to support role development is maintained by the Clinical Advisory Pharmacists Association (CAPA), a leading professional support and advocacy network.16
Traction for further development of practice pharmacist roles transpired at the health sector level with the 2020 Health and Disability System Review, which explicitly recognised the value ‘clinical pharmacists’ offered in medicines optimisation.17 This was followed in 2023 with the Primary, Community & Rural Early Actions Programme, a partnership between the then Te Aka Whai Ora–Māori Health Authority and Te Whatu Ora–Health NZ to strengthen care in these parts of the health system.18 A priority area identified was Comprehensive Care Teams, with funding for new roles, including pharmacists, to improve access and the breadth of care delivered to local communities. A position description for the practice pharmacist role (which may be tailored following discussion with the postholder) is now publicly available.19
Clear gains have been made at health policy levels, but scant empirical evidence exists about pharmacists in these roles in NZ, the tasks they undertake, the way in which they work and barriers and facilitators to undertaking the role effectively. A 2017 survey provided brief demographic data on some newer pharmacist roles emerging in primary health care (PHC), but it focused predominantly on medicines information provision tasks.20 In 2018, pharmacists working collaboratively from or within a general practice to improve the quality of medicines use for patients were surveyed.21 This research identified a broader picture of practice pharmacist roles, and perceptions on their integration into general practice. Boyina et al.22 took a different approach, retrospectively reviewing medical notes (2015–2018) to determine patient-related tasks undertaken by clinical pharmacist facilitators in a single geographical region (Southern District Health Board), and the characteristics of the patients concerned. In 2023, general practices with a practice pharmacist were surveyed about the services these pharmacists were providing and the value they added to the practice, finding that they were viewed as adding ‘significant value’ to clinician support (93%), patient outcomes (92%) and patient safety (89%).23
Survey results reported here form part of wider work around enhancing PHC services to improve healthcare delivery in NZ. This paper describes in detail the current status of pharmacists working in PHC settings other than community pharmacy, how these roles operate in practice, and the challenges faced.
Methods
The survey (Supplementary file S1) was developed based on previous literature and other research about practice pharmacists already being undertaken by the authors. Survey topics covered employment characteristics, services pharmacists currently offered or were intending to offer, patient consultations, relationships with other local health professionals and organisations, costs and benefits of pharmacists’ services, and demographics. Two of the authors are pharmacists (TNO and CM) and they contributed to the drafting of survey questions, which were tested with and refined by other research team members. Advice was also provided by a practice pharmacist on our research advisory group. The survey, hosted online on the Qualtrics platform,24 was piloted with two pharmacists, with final changes made in response to suggestions.
Ethical approval was given by the Human Ethics Committee of Te Herenga Waka–Victoria University of Wellington (#0000030080). Information about the study was provided at survey commencement and participants gave informed consent before they began the survey. Respondents were offered the opportunity to enter a prize draw for one of five NZD$100 gift vouchers.
The survey was live between late May and the end of August 2022. An initial invitation to participate was circulated through PCNZ and Pharmaceutical Society of NZ (PSNZ) newsletters, with an electronic link to the survey. PSNZ sent three reminder notices to members by email. Information was also circulated via CAPA and other channels directed at pharmacists to improve response rates.
The survey was open to all pharmacists and intern pharmacists working in community pharmacy or other PHC settings. Those working in community pharmacy answered one survey section (these results will be reported in another paper). Practice pharmacists (ie pharmacists working in other PHC settings (solely, or in addition to community pharmacy work)), were routed to a second section, of which the results are reported here. Interns were not eligible to complete this section because no general practices were approved as training sites. Due to the way national workforce statistics are captured and reported, and inconsistent definitions applied, the precise number of pharmacists working in PHC roles nationally is unknown. It was estimated at September 2022 that there were 83 pharmacists and 28 pharmacist prescribers (total: 111) working in general practice and Primary Health Organisations (PHOs) settings (pers. comm., Bob Buckham, Te Whatu Ora–Health New Zealand, 25 July 2023).
Survey questions included single and multiple response options. Some used Likert scales and some had free-text options. Descriptive statistical analyses were undertaken, including numbers and percentages of participants agreeing with each option. Values were regrouped where possible or were withheld when a grouping contained fewer than four respondents, to reduce potential identifiability. Missing values were reported in tables but were not used to calculate percentages. Free-text responses were analysed thematically.
Results
Forty-nine people participated in the primary healthcare arm of the survey. Of these, nine did not answer further questions beyond stating that they were a pharmacist, and one was an intern, so are excluded. The results are, therefore, based on 39 practice pharmacists, an estimated response rate of 35%.
Respondents’ characteristics are set out in Table 1. They were more likely to be female (84%), New Zealand European (81%) and slightly older than the median practising age compared with the national demography of pharmacists in June 2022.25 Fewer than four of the participants identified as Māori and none were Pacific. Most (89%) had postgraduate clinical pharmacy qualifications and 37% had a pharmacist prescriber qualification.
N | %A | ||
---|---|---|---|
Gender | |||
Female | 32 | 84 | |
Male | 6 | 16 | |
Missing | 1 | ||
Age group (years) | |||
25–34 | 10 | 26 | |
35–44 | 7 | 18 | |
45–54 | 15 | 39 | |
≥55 | 6 | 16 | |
Missing | 1 | ||
Ethnicity | |||
NZ European | 29 | 81 | |
Other | 7 | 19 | |
Prefer not to say/missing | 3 | ||
Total years practicing as a pharmacist | |||
0–<20 | 13 | 34 | |
20–<30 | 12 | 32 | |
≥30 | 13 | 34 | |
Missing | 1 | ||
Years worked in other primary health care settings | |||
0–<5 | 17 | 45 | |
5–<10 | 11 | 29 | |
≥10 | 10 | 26 | |
Missing | 1 | ||
Postgraduate pharmacy qualification | |||
Yes | 34 | 89 | |
No | 4 | 11 | |
Missing | 1 | ||
Other health-related postgraduate qualification | |||
Yes | 16 | 43 | |
No | 21 | 57 | |
Missing | 2 | ||
Pharmacist prescribing qualification | |||
Yes | 14 | 37 | |
No | 24 | 63 | |
Missing | 1 |
The 39 respondents recorded 51 separate jobs, with 23% having two or three jobs. Table 2 provides the respondents’ employment characteristics. Three-quarters of respondents worked at least partly within general practice and about half had roles in PHOs. About one-third worked in roles funded through each of the then District Health Boards (DHB), PHOs or general practices. Almost three-quarters of respondents were salaried, with most of the remainder being self-employed and fewer than four were paid through a mixture of salary and self-employment. About half of the pharmacists worked full-time, defined as ≥36 h per week across all roles. Almost 90% of respondents were based in main centres or other sizeable urban areas; few worked in smaller urban centres, and none defined their workplace as rural.
N | % | N | % | |||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Funding bodyA | Total hours workedB | |||||
District Health BoardC | 14 | 36 | ≤20 | 5 | 13 | |
General practice | 13 | 33 | 20–35 | 14 | 41 | |
Primary Health Organisation | 13 | 33 | ≥36 | 15 | 44 | |
Other | 8 | 15 | Missing | 5 | ||
Missing | 3 | |||||
SettingA | ||||||
General practice | 31 | 79 | RegionB | |||
Primary Health Organisation | 17 | 44 | Northern | 4 | 12 | |
Patients' homes | 14 | 36 | Midlands | 8 | 24 | |
Māori/Pacific health service | 4 | 10 | Central | 14 | 41 | |
Aged residential care | 4 | 10 | Southern region | 8 | 24 | |
Other | <4 | Missing | 5 | |||
RemunerationB | LocationB | |||||
Salaried | 27 | 71 | Main centre | 19 | 50 | |
Self-employed | 8 | 21 | Other urban area (pop > 30k) | 15 | 39 | |
Mixed | <4 | Other urban area (pop < 30k) | 4 | 11 | ||
Missing | 1 | Missing | 1 |
Practice pharmacists offered varied services. Those with more than one employment place were asked to answer with respect to their main role. Supplementary Table S1 shows that the three most common services were responding to medicines information queries from other health professionals (87%), advice and updates about medicines (85%), and liaison with community pharmacists (82%). Most also offered one or more medicines management services (medicines use review (44%), medicines therapy assessment (62%), medicines optimisation (69%)) and one-third were involved in prescribing. Immunisation was offered by 36%. Those not already offering one of the listed services were asked about their future intentions; strongest interest was shown in taking up repeat prescribing (to review and continue previously prescribed medication; 46%) and prescribing (initiating new medication; 42%).
Most practice pharmacists (n = 32, 86%) reported having patient consultations as part of their work (Table 3). Nearly half were undertaking fewer than 11 consults weekly. The reported capacity for additional consultations was a median of five (interquartile range 2–10), suggesting that many were working at or near capacity. Seven (22%) pharmacists reported that their patients directly funded the consultation; the remainder were funded by one or a combination of general practice, PHO and/or DHB. The amount paid by patients for consulting with a practice pharmacist was generally in line with standard fees for general practitioner consultations, which ranged from NZD$19.50 maximum for adults at Very Low Cost Access (VLCA) practices, and NZD$20–$51 for other practices.26,27 One respondent stated that patients paid the standard script fee, rather than a consultation fee. Lack of funding and lack of consultation space were the two biggest perceived limitations to seeing more patients; cost to the patient was also a common limitation to offering more consultations. Other reasons given included being too busy with other work, a lack of referrals from other health practitioners, and limited time in a practice.
N | % | ||
---|---|---|---|
Number of consultations per week | |||
1–10 | 14 | 44 | |
11–20 | 10 | 31 | |
≥21 | 8 | 25 | |
Do patients pay if they have a consultation with you? | |||
Yes | 7 | 22 | |
If No, who funds the cost of patient consultations?A | |||
General practice or health service | 6 | 24 | |
PHO | 8 | 32 | |
DHB | 18 | 72 | |
Do these factors limit your ability to see more patients?B | |||
Lack of funding | 23 | 66 | |
Lack of consultation space | 17 | 51 | |
Cost to patient | 10 | 29 | |
Other | 10 |
The lattermost constraint may be reflected by the fact that half of the pharmacists spent ≤10 h per week consulting with patients (Table 4). However, in addition to direct consultation time with patients, time was spent on consultation preparation and follow-up. Among those undertaking consultations, most conducted these alone; the remainder were completed jointly with doctors, nurse practitioners, or registered nurses.
N | % | N | % | |||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
What percentage of consultations do you undertake: | How many hours do you spend each week on: | |||||
By yourself | Consultation time with patients | |||||
50–84 | 7 | 22 | 1–10 | 16 | 55 | |
85–99 | 14 | 44 | 11–20 | 7 | 24 | |
100 | 11 | 34 | 21–40 | 6 | 21 | |
Not stated | 3 | |||||
Together with a doctor | Preparation for patient consultations | |||||
0 | 12 | 41 | 0–4 | 18 | 60 | |
1–5 | 11 | 38 | 5–9 | 8 | 27 | |
6–20 | 6 | 21 | 10–18 | 4 | 13 | |
Not stated | 3 | Not stated | 2 | |||
Together with a nurse practitioner | Follow-up from patient consultations | |||||
0 | 20 | 80 | 1–5 | 17 | 59 | |
1–6 | 5 | 20 | 6–24 | 12 | 41 | |
Not stated | 7 | Not stated | 3 | |||
Together with a registered nurse | Triage and booking patient appointments | |||||
0 | 9 | 32 | 0 | 8 | 25 | |
1–9 | 11 | 39 | 1–4 | 20 | 62 | |
10–53 | 8 | 29 | 5–38 | 4 | 13 | |
Not stated | 4 | Other patient-focused activities | ||||
0–4 | 13 | 42 | ||||
5–9 | 6 | 19 | ||||
10–31 | 12 | 39 | ||||
Not stated | 1 |
Survey respondents ranked improved health outcomes, improved understanding of their medicines, and medicines optimisation as the most important benefits of their role for patients (Table 5). Supporting doctors’ or nurse practitioners’ workload, changes in prescribing, and additional workforce capacity were ranked as the most important benefits for their workplace. The pharmacist’s salary, office space and resources, and consultation space were ranked by respondents as the main costs to the workplace. Additional workload for general practitioners, nurses or other practice staff were not ranked as major costs.
Ranked most important | Ranked in top three most important | ||
---|---|---|---|
Benefits for patients | |||
Improved health outcomes | 17 (44) | 29 (74) | |
Improved understanding of their medicines | 8 (21) | 24 (61) | |
Medicines optimisation | 7 (18) | 22 (86) | |
Improved understanding of their health conditions | 4 (10) | 15 (38) | |
Improved use of their medicines | 4 (10) | 14 (36) | |
Timely access to health services | <4 | 11 (23) | |
Improved access to prescriptions | <4 | 6 (15) | |
Fewer prescription items | <4 | <4 | |
Other | <4 | <4 | |
Benefits for the workplace | |||
Supporting doctors’ or nurse practitioners’ workload | 10 (26) | 27 (69) | |
Changes in prescribing | 10 (26) | 17 (44) | |
Additional workforce capacity | 8 (21) | 16 (41) | |
Staff have easy and timely access to medicines information | 7 (18) | 20 (51) | |
More medicines education for staff | <4 | 12 (31) | |
Capacity to undertake medicines audits | <4 | 8 (21) | |
Supporting registered nurses’ workload | <4 | 7 (18) | |
Liaison with community and/or hospital pharmacists | <4 | <4 | |
Other | 5 (13) | 7 (18) | |
Costs for the workplace | |||
Pharmacist’s salary | 33 (85) | 37 (95) | |
Office space and resources (phone, computer, etc) | 0 | 34 (87) | |
Consultation space | 5 (13) | 27 (69) | |
Additional workload for general practitioners or nurse practitioners | 0 | 5 (13) | |
Additional workload for registered nurses | 0 | <4 | |
Additional workload for reception staff | 0 | <4 | |
Additional workload for practice manager | 0 | <4 | |
Other | <4 | 5 (13) |
Data are presented as n (%).
Respondents were asked to rate their professional relationships with other people and organisations in their area on a five-point scale. Supplementary Table S2 shows the proportion of pharmacists reporting ‘very good’ or ‘good’ relationships. The highest percentages were with other PHC team members (eg practice nurses (95%), general practitioners (92%)). Relationships with pharmacists were strongest with others working in PHC settings (92%) and community pharmacists (84%), whereas it was slightly lower with hospital pharmacists (66%). Relationships with ‘your community’ were rated as ‘good’ or ‘very good’ by 76% of respondents; for iwi or Māori health providers, this was 55% and for Pacific health providers, 52%. The lowest rated relationships were with public health services (46% ‘good’ or ‘very good’).
Discussion
Principal findings
Many practice pharmacists in this survey worked in urban areas, were part-time and had more than one job, often with more than one funder. One-third were already prescribers and among the remainder, there was significant interest in becoming prescribers in future. Most undertook patient consultations, but lack of funding and lack of consultation space limited their ability to see more patients. Practice pharmacists rated the most important benefits of their role for patients as improved health outcomes, improved understanding of their medicines and medicines optimisation.
Strengths and limitations of the study
Practice pharmacist roles have been expanding internationally and, more recently, in NZ. However, limited information exists on how the roles have developed nationally and their configuration in routine practice. Our study updates previous NZ work,20–23,28 providing additional detail on how PHC pharmacist services are structured. We have estimated a response rate of about 35% among practice pharmacists; this rate likely reflects pressures that pharmacists were working under at that time. There is also a chance of selection bias in the sample; respondents may, for example, have particularly strong feelings about the practice pharmacist role. The survey was conducted at a single point in time, a time in which the introduction of pharmacists into general practice is a dynamic, developing field of service delivery, amidst ongoing health system restructure. Nevertheless, the findings contribute important information that can help both pharmacists and general practices when planning and establishing new services.
Comparison with other studies
The types of roles that were undertaken by a majority of practice pharmacists were broadly similar to that of earlier NZ data20–23 and also to pharmacists working in these roles internationally.29–33 These encompassed both patient- and practice-centred roles including responding to medicines information queries, advice and updates about medicines, audits, medicines optimisation and reconciliation, and liaison with community pharmacists.
Compared to an earlier NZ survey,21 a similar proportion held postgraduate clinical pharmacy qualifications, but the proportion with a prescriber qualification had increased (from 19% in 2018 to 37%), and all bar one of those qualified were prescribing or undertaking repeat prescribing in practice. There was also strong future interest in prescribing and repeat prescribing. Internationally, the General Pharmaceutical Council in Great Britain have signalled their clear intent to have all new graduate-registered pharmacists in their jurisdiction ready to prescribe at the point of entry to the register by 2026,34 and new standards for the education and training of pharmacists have been implemented to enable this change.35 In Canada, pharmacists have full prescribing authority in Alberta and limited prescribing rights in other provinces and territories.36 Interestingly, both the PCNZ position statement15 and Te Whatu Ora–Health NZ job description19 focus on experience of patient-facing practice and clinical pharmacy postgraduate study rather than a prescribing qualification, per se.
The geographical areas around the country where practice pharmacist services were delivered have not substantially changed since 2018.21 This is disappointing and hopefully something the health sector-funded implementation of new pharmacist roles in primary and community teams, targeted to a clear population need, will help address.37 A survey of NZ general practices found that 42% of those with a pharmacist were VLCA practices (one-third of these were also Māori health providers),23 indicating the potential of this role to address equity issues.
In contrast to previous work, our data have detailed not only the amount of time pharmacists spent working in general practice and who they are employed by, but also the weekly number of patient consultations they currently undertake, whether they have the capacity to increase consultation numbers, and the real-world workload configuration for those consultations. For example, some consultations were interprofessional, undertaken alongside other health professionals. Pharmacist time was also needed to prepare for pre-consultation and for appropriate follow-up post-consultation. When considering the financial cost to a service deliverer, the extra time required around each consultation plus the cost of additional health professional time if consultations are undertaken jointly also need to be considered. This needs to be balanced against the value of interprofessional consultations if reserved for more complex situations. Although funding was an important factor limiting participants’ ability to undertake more consultations, practical issues including consultation space and limited time in practice were also identified. These align with other national findings from a general practice perspective23 and international findings.10,38,39
Boundary encroachment has been previously identified as a barrier to extended pharmacist services both internationally38,40 and in NZ.41 This may be reflected by some participants in the present study identifying a reticence on the part of some other health professionals to refer patients on to them.
Haua et al.21 investigated pharmacist perceptions of the benefits and challenges to working effectively in general practice. Our study framed this differently, specifically investigating pharmacist perceptions of the benefits for patients and the costs and benefits for the health service where they were employed. Both studies identified improved health outcomes for patients and supporting the workload of other health practitioners as benefits of practice pharmacist roles, as well as the need to address funding-related challenges. In addition, this study provides data about perceived costs to the practice; the costs of pharmacist salary, office space and resources, and consultation space were all ranked highly. This highlights the need to consider the pharmacist role (and consequent costs) in both direct patient care (consultations), but also their role of supporting others (through requirements for office space). This aligns with a recent NZ study from the general practice perspective23 that also identified funding and office space as barriers to expanding pharmacist support. Notably, in both the latter study23 and our study, professional oversight and additional workload for other practice staff were not highly ranked issues.
Relationships between health professionals and with external organisations are unquestionably vital.39,42,43 Our data clearly show the breadth of people and organisations that practice pharmacists need to potentially liaise with in NZ. However, the importance of trusting relationships is not discussed further here as this issue is already widely reported on nationally21 and internationally39,42,43 as a key enabler to service expansion.
Implications and future research
Further expansion of practice pharmacist services nationally should consider how their location and funding can improve health equity. Practical issues such as space within a general practice are important when more new roles are entering the primary care setting. Further research could explore differences between practice pharmacists who were or were not prescribers, along with a full cost-benefit analysis of the role.
Conclusions
In summary, we have described in detail the practice pharmacist role in NZ, which continues to expand and develop. The inclusion of a pharmacist in the primary healthcare team may address some of the ongoing workforce issues facing PHC, but careful planning is required to ensure support and appropriate infrastructure is available for practice pharmacist roles to succeed.
Data availability
The data sets generated and/or analysed during the current study are not publicly available as ethics approval was given on condition that only members of the research team would have access to these data.
Declaration of funding
The study was funded by a Health Research Council of New Zealand programme grant (HRC 18/667). The study funders had no role in the design, data collection, analysis or writing of this manuscript, nor the decision to submit the final manuscript.
Acknowledgements
The authors would like to thank those who piloted and gave feedback on the survey, the pharmacy groups who advertised the survey, and all who participated in the survey.
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