Changes to NPF
September 27, 2010 by admin
On 1 September, some changes were made to the Nurse Prescribers’ Formulary (NPF) - see here for details.
February changes to NPF
February 25, 2010 by admin
Some changes have been announced to the Nurse Prescribers’ Formulary for Community Practitioners. The following emollients have been added: Aquadrate Cream 10%; Balneum Plus Cream; E45 Itch Relief Cream; Eucerin Intensive Cream 10%; Eucerin Intensive Lotion 10%; and Nutraplus Cream. These medicinal preparations have been deleted: Phenothrin Aqueous Lotion NPF and Zinc Paste and Calamine Bandage.
New NPF published for community practitioners
October 30, 2009 by admin
A new ‘Nurse Prescribers’ Formulary for Community Practitioners’ has been published as a 64-page booklet for community practitioner nurse prescribers, and provides an overview of some common conditions and details of medicines that may be prescribed by these nurses.
It is published by the British Medical Association and the Royal Pharmaceutical Society of Great Britain, in association with the Community Practitioners’ and Health Visitors’ Association and the Royal College of Nursing and is designed for use with the ‘British National Formulary’ (see here).
More education about role of nurse prescriber needed
April 10, 2009 by admin
More education of doctors about the role of nurse prescribers is needed to address remaining misunderstandings and concerns, if the full benefits of this development are to be realised and nurse prescribers are to feel supported.
This is the conclusion of a review of recent changes, particularly those affecting community nurses. More than 30,000 nurses in the UK are now qualified to prescribe from the Nurse Prescribing Formulary (NPF) for community practitioners, with many also qualified as independent/supplementary prescribers (NIP/NSP). Although the available evidence suggests that prescribing from the NPF for community practitioners is fairly limited, most of the 14 000 NIP/NSP in the UK prescribe much more regularly, and 20% of these have been reported to be working in the community. In addition, those nurses who do prescribe from the NPF for community practitioners report benefits. As policy changes move healthcare from hospitals into the community, many patients with long-term conditions now see nurses as their first point of contact. Community staff nurses without specialist practitioner qualifications can now access the training needed to prescribe from the NPF for community practitioners, and the increasing numbers of community nurses becoming qualified as NIP/NSP also reflects this shift. The benefits of nurse prescribing exceed those predicted originally by the Department of Health, and more robust training standards are in place. There is still confusion and concerns, however, among doctors about the role, its professional limitations and nurses’ clinical skill base which are at present hampering its implementation more fully.
Courtenay M. Nurse prescribing, policy, practice and evidence base. Br J Comm Nursing 2008; 13(12): 563-566.