Pharmacy Quarterly April 2014 | Page 10

PQ  APRIL  2014  |  Issue  06   10       BH   That  is  a  great  question.  My  answer  is  very  specific   to   the   Alberta   model   of   APA   because   with   the   exception   of   New   Mexico,   USA1   where   they   can   prescribe   opioids   and   controlled   substances,   no   other   jurisdiction   has   implemented   APA   as   comprehensively   as   Alberta.   The   Alberta   APA   legislation,   regulations   and   execution   are   second   performing   the   last   step,   prescribing   what   you   wer;   -­‐ restrict   our   activities   to   defined   conditions/diagnoses   or   to   collaborative-­‐only   settings.  We  allowed  prescribing  on  the  request  of   another   regulated   health   professional   and   we   stated   our   own   competence   would   be   the   only   defined   limitation   on   which   federal   Prescription   Drug   List   drugs   we   could   prescribe.   The   other   provinces   have   only   piecemeal   prescribing   compared   to   Alberta.   And   I   said   exactly   that   to   Greg   Eberhart   when   I   last   spoke   with   him   in   January  2014  at  the  White  Coat  Ceremony.     complete   the   care   cycle   by   prescribing   what   the   patient   needs-­‐   and   now   our   laws   and   regulations   validate   and   confirm   that.   Prescribing   is   included   With   that   preamble,   my   answer   is   that   in   Alberta   pharmacists   and   students   should   consider   APA   the   de   facto   scope   of   practice   for   pharmacists.   It   ;   non-­‐ APA  practice  rather,  should  be  considered  partial-­‐ scope  of  practice.  Do  you  get  the  nuance,  do  you   authorized  to  fulfill  that  need.  And  prescribe.  If  all   new   pharmacists   get   their   APA   and   practice   with   their  APA,  we  will  change  what  our  de  facto  scope   of   practice   is.   And   as   a   profession   we   will   arrive   where  we  should  have  been  all  along.     match   our   competence,   our   abilities,   our   expertise,  our  natural  role.  Students,  embrace  this   prescribe.   But   when   you   do   know   what   your   KH   public]   have   legislated   this   full   scope   of   practice   and   the   Alberta   College   of   Pharmacists   [protecting  the  public]  has  regulated  the  full  scope   of   practice.   So   the   student   considering   APA   should  look  at  it  this  way:  you  detect  and  define  a   drug-­‐related  problem,  perhaps  the  patient  has  an   untreated   condition.   You   know   the   patient,   you   set   out   your   alternatives,   you   make   your   recommendation  and  you  know  what  to  monitor  if   your   medication   gets   prescribed.   But   then   what?   The   old   way,   the   non-­‐Alberta   way,   the   partial-­‐ scope-­‐of-­‐practice-­‐way,  you  hand  off  this  last  step-