‘Aiming for agreement in July’: CPE chief gives service negotiations update

Expanded services announced in May could be implemented from this month, the pharmacy negotiator has revealed.

Ms Morrison said that CPE is "working at pace" on "in-depth" negotiations over service payment models

Negotiations on the Pharmacy First programme may conclude this month, according to Community Pharmacy England’s (CPE) chief executive Janet Morrison.

In a twitter thread published earlier today (July 3), Ms Morrison said that CPE was “aiming for agreement in July”.

This would be followed by “cross-government clearance” later in the month and implementation of the negotiations would run from July to September, she added. 

Read more: Pharmacy First set for national launch ‘by end of 2023’ following consultation

Ms Morrison said that CPE wants to get “new money out to hard-pressed members” as quickly as possible but that this is balanced with making sure that funding is “future-proofed and fair”.

And she added that these “complex and critical” negotiations “will have implications” for the next community pharmacy contractual framework “so it’s vital that we approach them with rigour”.

Negotiations over payments

“We are working at pace but the process and timing of negotiations are not in our gift,” she said, adding that CPE was working with “significant stakeholders across government” including the Department of Health and Social Care (DH), NHS England (NHSE), the Treasury and the Prime Minister’s office.

Ms Morrison said that “in-depth” negotiations were underway on the payment models and “service design” for the cardiovascular screening, contraception and common conditions services.

Read more: Claims Pharmacy First could fuel antibiotic resistance ‘disingenuous’

The negotiations on the payment models are looking at “the balance between funding core capacity and activity payments”, the distribution of funds across the services and how the “delivery and impact” of the services will be measured, she added.

And she said that CPE has been “represented” on a working group led by NHSE around the “interoperability of GP and pharmacy systems”, which is “essential” to the start date of Pharmacy First.

Pharmacy First

Meanwhile, Ms Morrison said that NHSE is developing the patient group directions (PGDs) for the seven conditions that will form part of the Pharmacy First programme.

She added that while pharmacy contractors are “involved”, this is being “clinically led to ensure alignment with NICE principles and antimicrobial stewardship policy”.

In May, a group of scientists raised objections to Pharmacy First’s plan to empower pharmacists to treat seven common conditions, on the grounds that the scheme could cause over-prescription of antibiotics and the spread of antibiotic resistance. 

Read more: Explainer: Could the Pharmacy First service affect my clinical liability?

On May 9, NHSE released its delivery plan for recovering access to primary care – revealing that community pharmacy would receive “up to £645 million” over two years to “expand” services, including a Pharmacy First service, which would launch by the end of the year.

According to the plan, the seven conditions that would be treatable by community pharmacists under PGDs were uncomplicated urinary tract infections (UTIs) in women, earache, sinusitis, sore throat, impetigo, insect bites and shingles.

Sign in or register for free

James Stent

Read more by James Stent

James Stent joined C+D as a digital reporter in May 2023 from the South African human rights news agency GroundUp, where he was senior reporter and consultant editor.

Latest from News

Slew of fentanyl patches ‘out of stock’ until December

 
• By 
 • comment1

The government has issued a warning that multiple strengths of fentanyl delivered through transdermal patches will be out of stock until the end of the year.

RSV jab pilot to expand by ‘up to’ 200 pharmacies

 
• By 
 • comment0

The DH has revealed plans to expand the pharmacy RSV vaccine programme by “up to 200 sites in identified target areas” in 2025/26 to “reverse the downward trend” in uptake.

Pharmacist busts vet pretending dad’s tramadol was for dog

 
• By 
 • comment4

A vet has been suspended for issuing a “false prescription” of tramadol for a dog she “randomly” picked that was actually intended for the treatment of her father.

More from Clinical

DH to place ‘explicit restrictions’ on funded blood pressure checks

  • comment

The pharmacy hypertension service specification is set to be updated to exclude patients who request “frequent measurement of their blood pressure”.

NHSE mulls pharmacy HPV vaccine rollout

 
• By 
 • comment

NHS England (NHSE) has suggested that community pharmacies should offer HPV vaccinations to “raise awareness” and increase uptake of the jab.