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SHPA calls for workforce, medicine access equity ahead of NSW election


Friday, 10 March, 2023

SHPA calls for workforce, medicine access equity ahead of NSW election

(SHPA) has released its 2023 New South Wales State Election Priorities, calling on major parties, minor parties and independent candidates to end longstanding inequities to medicines access and access to hospital pharmacist workforce in New South Wales public hospitals.

SHPA Chief Executive Kristin Michaels said, 鈥淣ew South Wales leads the nation in many ways but when it comes to medicines access and pharmacy services in public hospitals, it lags well behind.鈥

鈥淪HPA鈥檚 priorities are simple, clear and directly address two recommendations from last year鈥檚 New South Wales ambulance ramping inquiry, to which SHPA detailed the extent and impact of under-resourcing in New South Wales public hospital pharmacy departments.鈥

The central pillars of SHPA鈥檚 2023 New South Wales State Election Priorities are the $268 million 黑料吃瓜群网 Pharmacy Workforce Sustainability in NSW Public 黑料吃瓜群网s proposal, which will deliver an additional 600 pharmacist positions each year, and action to establish a with the Commonwealth.

Michaels said evidence is mounting that the lack of hospital pharmacy support is contributing to preventable medicine-related harm.

鈥淐urrent data shows New South Wales public hospitals have 38% more inpatient beds than Victoria, yet have 23% less hospital pharmacists.

鈥淣ew South Wales hospital pharmacy departments cannot meet pharmacist-to-patient ratios described in professional standards, posing a significant risk of harmful medication error for patients.鈥

鈥淚n 2020, the was called following a fatal medication error involving a high-risk anti-stroke medicine, which demonstrates how important pharmacists are to safeguarding patients from medication-related errors which can have devastating but preventable consequences.

鈥淲ithout a sufficient workforce, New South Wales hospital pharmacy departments are missing out on innovations that improve safety and quality of care and support system capacity and bed flow, such as Partnered Pharmacist Medication Charting and Tech-Check-Tech inpatient medication supply models, which are entrenched in most other states and territories.鈥

Between 2001 and 2010, all states in Australia except New South Wales established a Pharmaceutical Reform Agreement with the Commonwealth, which enabled their public hospital patients to receive a month鈥檚 supply of subsidised medicines.

Michaels said establishing a Pharmaceutical Reform Agreement with the Commonwealth is recommended by the ambulance ramping inquiry, and has been a longstanding call from New South Wales pharmacists and pharmacy technicians for over two decades.

鈥淣ew South Wales patients discharging from public hospitals can receive as little as three days鈥 supply of discharge medicines.

鈥淭his is nationally inconsistent, contributes to emergency departments being overwhelmed, and places immense pressure on patients to seek an immediate appointment with their GP post-discharge, facing a two- to four-week wait in many cases.鈥

Michaels welcomed initiatives across the major parties, while noting new hospitals without commensurate healthcare workers presents a missed opportunity.

鈥淲e welcome the NSW Greens in supporting both of SHPA鈥檚 2023 New South Wales State Election Priorities, recognising the call for workforce investment aligns with their health policies, and NSW Labor鈥檚 announcement for 2000 health scholarships, extended to allied health workers.

鈥淪hould Labor form government, we look forward to supporting five-year bonded positions allocated to hospital pharmacists through internships, SHPA鈥檚 Foundation Residencies and Advanced Training Residencies to bolster the future hospital pharmacy workforce.

鈥淲e also welcome the NSW Coalition鈥檚 pledge of $1.2 billion to build and upgrade 20 hospitals and health facilities, however we must have hospital pharmacists staffed at all of these health services at pharmacist-to-patient ratios recognised in professional standards, to ensure NSW communities have access to medicines expertise on acute hospital wards that is on par with their eastern seaboard neighbours.鈥

Image credit: iStock.com/FatCamera

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