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Scotland delivers e-prescription service

Tags: Chronic Medication Service   Community   Cuts   E-Prescribing   ePharmacy   GP   GPs   Medicines   Pharmacist   Scotland  

14 Jul 2009

Scotland has announced that it has become the first country in the UK to deliver an electronic prescription service, with more than 90% of prescriptions now submitted electronically.

Scottish health secretary Nicola Sturgeon said the electronic Acute Medication Service (eAMS) was the first national system of its kind to go live anywhere in the UK and was now enabled in 99% of Scottish GP practices and pharmacies.

The eAMS prints a barcode on prescriptions at a GP surgery and sends a message to Scotland’s ePharmacy Message Store.

When a patient presents at a pharmacy with their barcoded prescription, the pharmacist can scan the barcode to pull down the prescription and dispense the medicine.

Dispensing a prescription triggers the creation of an electronic claim message to NHS National Services Scotland (NSS).

The Scottish government said eAMS cuts the risk of errors between GPs and pharmacists, delivers improvements such as the use of universal codes for virtually all medicines, and boosts efficiency.

Sturgeon added: “With eAMS we are now seeing more than 90% of prescriptions submitted electronically. This shows the demand among GPs and pharmacists to work together to make the best use of the latest technology to improve services for patients.”

Sturgeon said the early adopter phase of the Chronic Medication Service had also begun in Fife.

Under the CMS, patients with long term conditions can register with a pharmacist. This allows their GP to produce a 24 or 48 week serial prescription for them, dispensed at time intervals determined by the GP.

In addition, the pharmacist will draw up detailed pharmaceutical care plans with the patient and carry out medicines reviews.

The Scottish government said patients would continue to be given traditional paper prescriptions in addition to the electronic version and that this would continue until the system is well-established.

“There is no intention of moving to an entirely paperless prescribing system,” it added.

The Atos Origin Alliance designed, built and operates the eAMS. Scott Haldane, managing director of the Atos Origin Alliance, said eAMS brought benefits to patients, GPs, community pharmacists and NSS.

He added: “We are proud to be involved in a service in which Scotland is taking the lead and one that involves real partnership and collaboration between so many different entities.”

Fiona Barr

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Reader's Comments
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Reader's Comments

1

Still a slow process for patients

15 Jul 09 09:07

The trick is -not for the patient to stand in a queue and deliver a barcode; which then has to be made up, double checked and labelled -taking from 10-60 minutes depending on Pharmacy popularity; but that the prescription is already available when the patient gets there minimising the wait and potential queues.

Example; I fax my GP for a repeat prescription once a month -because the surgery moved to the other inaccessible side of town. Pts. can phone too or use plain old Royal Mail 1st class. Two or three visits in the old system was just damn inefficient.

With 48 hours the script is issued, collected by the pharmacist next door, made up and bagged ready for a 1-stop visit by me to collect.

Simple and millions of pounds cheaper.

Ever heard of Occams razor? Niether have the NHS, (Google it)

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