COMMUNITY pharmacies can provide a cost effective solution to the challenges facing the NSW health system, Pharmacy Guild of Australia National President, Trent Twomey, told NSW State MPs.
Speaking at the Guild NSW Branch's annual Parliamentary Dinner on Thu, Twomey urged politicians from all sides to follow Queensland's lead in expanding the profession's scope of practice.
Twomey noted that Australia has lagged behind other OECD jurisdictions in authorising pharmacists to work to their full scope, adding that, "unfortunately with the great federation of Australia, NSW is sadly not leading the way in the amount of primary healthcare services that the citizens can receive from their local community pharmacy".
"We are here with a solution," the Guild President said.
"The solution that we have is to be able to use all the underutilised skills and knowledge that all of the community pharmacists, and indeed our pharmacy assistants, have to turn each and every one of the 2,000 pharmacists in the State of NSW into proper primary healthcare hubs.
"There are over 200,000 presentations to emergency departments in the State of NSW each and every year that can be avoided, if we simply adopted the scope of practice model that the Palaszczuk Government announced in Queensland.
"Not one dollar is required from the purse of the NSW Government, not one dollar is required from the taxpayers of NSW."
Twomey noted that with NSW set to go to the polls in Mar 2023, the Guild wanted to engage with politicians and patients to discuss how to deliver better access to health services in the State, and what role pharmacists could play in the future.
He noted that conversations with members of the public showed "they don't want to have to wait four hours in an emergency department".
"And they don't want to have to wait for four days to get a general practice appointment," he said.
"We come here with a solution... and we don't want a single dollar for it."
The above article was sent to subscribers in Pharmacy Daily's issue from 24 Oct 22
To see the full newsletter, see the embedded issue below or CLICK HERE to download Pharmacy Daily from 24 Oct 22