PRIMARY KEY RESPONSIBLITIES A Clinical Pharmacist in a general practice organisation has the following key responsibilities in relation to delivering health services. 1. Be a prescriber and work with and alongside the general practice team 2. Work as part of a multi-disciplinary team in a patient facing role to clinically assess and treat patients using their expert knowledge of medicines 3. Undertake clinical structured medication reviews with patients and produce recommendations to the GP on prescribing and monitoring. 4. Proactively manage people with complex polypharmacy, especially the elderly, people in care homes, those with multiple co-morbidities and people with learning disabilities or autism (through STOMP – Stop Over Medication Programme) 5. Provide specialist expertise in the use of medicines whilst helping to address the public health care needs and to help address health inequalities 6. Provide leadership on person-centred medicines optimisation (including ensuring prescribers in the practice conserve antibiotics in line with local antimicrobial stewardship guidance) and quality improvement, whilst contributing to the quality and outcomes framework and enhanced services 7. Through structured medication reviews, support patients to take their medications to get the best from them, reduce waste and promote self-care 8. Have a leadership role in supporting further integration of general practice with the wider healthcare teams (including community and hospital pharmacy) to help improve patient outcomes, ensure better access to healthcare and help manage general practice workload 9. Take a central role in the clinical aspects of shared care protocols, clinical research with medicines, liaison with specialist pharmacists where required. 10. To act as the point of contact for all medicine related matters, establishing positive working relationships 11. To consult patients within defined levels of competence and independently prescribe acute and repeat medication 12. To receive referrals and directed patients from triage services and other clinicians 13. To receive and resolve medicines queries from patients and staff 14. To manage a therapeutic drug monitoring system and the recall of patients taking high risk drugs, i.e., anticoagulants, anticonvulsants and DMARDs etc. 15. To provide pharmaceutical consultations as required, being an integral part of the multidisciplinary team 16. To review medications for newly registered patients 17. To support patients with confidence and compliance with their medication 18. To encourage cost-effective prescribing throughout the Practice 19. To produce and implement a Practice repeat prescribing policy 20. To provide advice and answer medication related queries from patients and staff 21. To organise and oversee the organisation’s medicines optimisation systems including the repeat prescribing and medication review systems 22. To improve the quality and effectiveness of prescribing through clinical audit and education to improve performance against NICE standards and clinical and prescribing guidance. 23. To develop yourself and the role through participation in clinical supervision, training and service redesign activities 24. To ensure appropriate supervision of safe storage, rotation and disposal of vaccines and drugs. To apply infection-control measures within the practice according to local and national guidelines 25. To review the latest guidance ensuring the organisation conforms to NICE, CQC etc. 26. To provide targeted support and proactive reviews for vulnerable, complex patients and those at risk of admission and re-admission to secondary care 27. To provide proactive leadership on medicines and prescribing systems to the Practice and patient population 28. To support in the delivery of enhanced services and other service requirements on behalf of the Practice 29. Involvement in any necessary learning brought about through clinical incidents and near-miss events 30. To undertake all mandatory training as required 31. To contribute to clinical governance 32. To contribute to public health campaigns (e.g., COVID-19 or flu clinics) through advice or direct care