I am currently undertaking the non-medical prescribing course.
I work in Out of Hours in Lincolnshire. Many of our patients are palliative and need syringe drivers either commencing or changing in the out of hours period. This is certainly very worrying.
1. Granted once qualified as a non-medical prescriber I could prescribe the individual drugs and administer one off doses. However, this is far from ideal for patients, particularly over a long bank holiday weekend as we cover a large rural area and might not be able to respond in a timely manner, to the palliative cases if we are on other visits, when the next stat dose is due.
2. It would be almost impossible to sort out CMPs for each and every palliative patient covered by our service due to the sheer numbers of patients, number of GP practices we cover, the number of non-medical prescribers that work in our service and would therefore need to sign a CMP for each patient, the distances we cover and the fact that we work when everyone else is not. Although we have good links with the surgeries and are informed when patients reach the palliative stage patients would, I fear, slip through the net and not have a CMP in place when needed.
3. Finally how are we affected if a GP (either the patient's own or one of on duty in the Out of Hours Service) prescribes the drug(s) and we or our community nursing colleagues add the drugs to the syringe driver?
I agree with the above comments that the world has gone mad and that palliative patients will not be able to be cared for effectively at home.
How does this fit in with the Governments plans mentioned this week in the news that palliative patients can choose where they want to die?