Archives for February 2024
Job Advert – Dacey Ltd – Orthotist
Are you a healthcare professional with a passion for improving patient care?
Do you want to improve patient outcomes by leading groundbreaking research studies?
Could you be a research delivery leader?
Virtual event – Wednesday 20 March 2024 (12.30pm to 2.00pm)
Registration is now open via the link: https://cvent.me/5WXreK
Learn more about our Master’s level clinical research delivery leadership qualifications at this event:
- Suitable for all healthcare professionals who have no or limited research experience and those currently working in research delivery
- All courses are designed for part time learning to fit around busy schedules
- All courses consist of theory-based online learning modules and a research practice experience module. The ‘research practice’ module helps learners to develop their skills and expertise by working on research projects alongside experienced mentors
A number of DHSC funded bursaries for course fees will be available. Further details will be provided at the event.
Further information, together with the event registration form can be found on the event home page using the link: https://cvent.me/5WXreK
You can also register for updates, such as course application deadlines by completing this form.
A PDF poster is attached which you may want to print and display to increase awareness of this event.
Elections to the Executive Committee – Nominees
2024-2025
BAPO Regional Conference – Cardiff – Venue Change
We are looking forward to our next regional conference in Cardiff on Friday 8th March 2024 and hope to see you there. If you’ve already booked you’ll be expecting to go to the All Nations Centre for the day, so we’re getting in touch to let you know we have changed the venue. We’ll now be holding the conference at the Future Inn Hotel which is located in beautiful Cardiff Bay, 10 minutes from the city centre and very close to Cardiff Bay train station.
We have changed the venue for a very important reason. Recently it came to our attention that the All Nations Centre made public statements supporting conversion therapy, and the views expressed are very much not in keeping with BAPO’s values. We are sharing this with you as we want to be transparent and to confirm that we did not know about this when the venue was booked, and we certainly would not have booked it had we known. On learning this information we acted at pace to cancel the booking and to seek a suitable alternative. We trust that you will understand why we have made this change which reflects BAPO’s values and the priority we give to equality, diversity and inclusion.
The Future Inn Hotel is a lovely venue and it will provide a great experience for both delegates and exhibitors. There is free car parking, not easy to find in a city, with electric car charging. The Hotel is also offering a discount rate of £86.20 to anyone attending the conference who would like to stay overnight, these spaces are limited so please contact the venue early to avoid disappointment. Please advise on the booking that you are attending the BAPO conference for the discount.
There are still some delegate spaces available so if you’ve not already booked your place you can do so here but don’t delay, our last two regional conferences both sold out and we’d hate you to miss out.
With best wishes from everyone at BAPO.
Sue Irving, Chief Executive
Ticket prices reduced: The recording is available for the successful BAPO Virtual Symposium: Outcome Measures for Lower Limb Orthotics which took place on Saturday 27 January 2024
Job advert – Orthotist Band 6 – Guy’s and St Thomas’, London
Job Advert – Orthotists – Essex – Peacocks
Job advert – Graduate orthotists – Peacocks
Lord Bradley Oral Question:
progress on extending prescribing responsibilities to more allied health professionals –
Briefing from the #PrescribingNow coalition – 06/02/2024
Introduction
- Despite assurances given to peers during the passage of the Medicines and Medical Devices Act in 2020, there has been no substantive movement on extending independent prescribing responsibilities to dietitians, occupational therapists, orthoptists, diagnostic radiographers, and speech and language therapists.
- The Government has also undertaken no assessment of the benefits of doing so, as confirmed by a series of written questions by MPs during 2023, most recently in October 2023.[1]
- In February 2023, the British Dietetic Association, the Royal College of Occupational Therapists, the British and Irish Orthoptic Society, the Society of Radiographers, and the Royal College of Speech and Language Therapists, launched the #PrescribingNow campaign. The coalition has since been joined by the British Association of Prosthetists and Orthotists and the College of Operating Department Practitioners.
- Coalition letters to Secretary of State for Health and Social Care in February 2023 and September 2023 remain unanswered. So do letters from individual organisations.
- In December 2023, the House of Lords Integration of Primary and Community Care Committee recommended, ‘More community disciplines should be given independent prescribing and referral rights, going further than the recently announced plans from the government for pharmacists’.[2]
- The coalition welcomes this recommendation. It is now time for the Government to act on it and finally start the moves to extending independent prescribing responsibilities to dietitians, occupational therapists, orthoptists, diagnostic radiographers, speech and language therapists, prosthetists and orthotists, and operating department practitioners, in the interests of our patients, other healthcare professionals, the wider health and care system, and the public purse.
Assurances to peers during the passages of the Medicines and Medical Devices Act in 2020
Responding to Baroness Thorton’s amendment on 11 November 2020, Baroness Penn said:
- I know that a number of NHS professional groups are keen to see their members taking on responsibility for supplying or prescribing medicines. We have recently seen papers put forward by the British Dietetic Association, the Royal College of Occupational Therapists, the British and Irish Orthoptic Society, the Society of Radiographers and the Royal College of Speech and Language Therapists. I am very grateful to the professional groups for the careful consideration that they have given to these issues.
- I reassure noble Lords that NHSE/I [NHS England] already has extensive joint working and engagement under way with these and other professional groups to consider whether any other changes would help keep patients safe and well. This will build on the historic work with various professional bodies and the devolved Administrations, over the last few years, which resulted in a number of changes, including allowing paramedics and therapeutic radiographers to be independent prescribers. As well as this, a wider scoping project is being led by NHS England and NHS Improvement, with the devolved Administrations and professional bodies, on the current and potential future use of medicines supply, administration and prescribing mechanisms by a range of non-medical healthcare professionals.[3]
In a follow-up letter to peers dated 24 November 2020, Lord Bethell commented:
- The noble Lord, Lord Ramsbotham emphasised how some allied health professionals are keen to take on prescribing responsibilities to better support their patients and increase capacity in their home trusts. I know this is a heartfelt desire and I am keen to work with NHSE&I to ensure we can support these moves where it is safe and appropriate to do so.
- Significant moves have been made over the past few years enabling allied professions to take on extended roles with medicines, including enabling orthoptists and speech and language therapists to use patient group directions; diagnostic radiographers and dietitians to be supplementary prescribers; and paramedics and physiotherapists to be independent prescribers. NHSE&I is currently scoping the next phase of this programme of work and I expect it to report to me in April next year. I would not wish to pre-empt its findings because it is important that we act on evidence and prioritise the greatest benefits for patients and NHS need.
The NHSE scoping report which Lord Bethell said would be with him by April 2021 has not been published. It is not clear, therefore, what the report said about extending independent prescribing responsibilities to us. This is despite some of us submitting material to the scoping exercise.
Issue to press the Government on What did the report say, and will the Government publish it? |
#PrescribingNow campaign February 2023
- The #PrescribingNow campaign was launched in February 2023 calling for independent prescribing responsibilities to be extended to us.[4]
- The Government has not responded to letters we sent them in February and October 2023.
- Numerous MPs have tabled written questions or written to ministers.
- The Government’s replies have been disappointing, revealing no assessment has been taken of the benefits of extending prescribing responsibilities to us, despite the 2020/21 NHSE scoping exercise.
- The Government saying we are already able to supply or administer medicines to their patients via Patient Group Directions misses the point, and ignores the arguments peers made back in 2020.
- As detailed in the campaign’s briefing, without independent prescribing responsibilities, we cannot play our full part in supporting our patients, other healthcare professionals, and the wider system.[5]
Issue to press the Government on When will the Government start the process of extending independent prescribing responsibilities to dietitians, occupational therapists, orthoptists, diagnostic radiographers, speech and language therapists, prosthetists and orthotists, and operating department practitioners? |
House of Lords Integration of Primary and Community Care Committee report December 2023
- In December 2023, the House of Lords Integration and Community Care Committee report recommended extending prescribing responsibilities to more community disciplines:
- More community disciplines should be given independent prescribing and referral rights, going further than the recently announced plans from the government for pharmacists. The DHSC should build on this work and investigate whether other community clinicians can be given similar rights. POD and community clinicians are trained to a high level and could be given (new or enhanced) prescribing and referral rights that reduce demand on GPs as either prescribers or referrers. For example, orthoptists could monitor and prescribe glaucoma treatments. (Paragraph 168)
- The Committee’s report quoted from the #PrescribingNow coalition’s Q & A.
- We very strongly welcome and support the Committee’s recommendation.
Issue to press the Government on Will the Government act on the Committee’s recommendation? If so, when? If not, why not? |
[1] https://questions-statements.parliament.uk/written-questions/detail/2023-09-19/200543
[2] https://committees.parliament.uk/committee/649/integration-of-primary-and-community-care-committee/news/198938/integration-is-key-to-health-service-improvement-says-lords-committee/
[3] https://hansard.parliament.uk/lords/2020-11-11/debates/BA33FB80-686D-40A3-802D-867ED6691A6E/MedicinesAndMedicalDevicesBill
[4] https://www.rcslt.org/policy-and-influencing/england/campaigns/
[5] https://www.rcslt.org/wp-content/uploads/2023/02/Q-A.pdf