Palliative Care

Service specification (what it is, how it works)

Palliative care in the pharmacy sector refers to the specialized role pharmacists play in improving the quality of life for patients with serious, life-limiting illnesses by managing medications and symptoms effectively. Here’s a clear breakdown:

What is Palliative Care?

Palliative care is a patient- and family-centred approach that focuses on relieving suffering and optimising quality of life for individuals facing life-threatening conditions. It addresses physical, emotional, social, and spiritual needs and can be provided alongside curative treatments or as part of end-of-life care (hospice). [ashp.org]

Role of Pharmacy in Palliative Care

Pharmacists are integral members of the interdisciplinary palliative care team. Their responsibilities include:

  • Medication Optimization: Selecting and adjusting drugs to manage pain, nausea, breathlessness, and other symptoms while minimizing side effects.
  • Deprescribing: Discontinuing unnecessary or harmful medications to reduce polypharmacy risks.
  • Alternative Routes & Formulations: Preparing nontraditional dosage forms (e.g., transdermal patches, compounded solutions) for patients who cannot take oral medications.
  • Education: Counselling patients, families, and healthcare teams on medication use, side effects, and safe administration.
  • Monitoring & Adjustments: Regularly reviewing therapy for effectiveness and safety, including opioid conversions and managing drug interactions.
  • Emergency Support: Providing rapid access to “just in case” medications for symptom crisis. [pharmacytimes.com], [medboundhub.com], [news-medical.net]

How Does It Work in Pharmacy Practice?

Palliative care in pharmacy involves collaboration and continuity across settings (hospital, hospice, community pharmacy). Key processes include:

  1. Comprehensive Medication Review: Assessing all current drugs for appropriateness and safety.
  2. Symptom Control Planning: Developing individualised regimens for pain, nausea, anxiety, and other distressing symptoms.
  3. Coordination Across Care Settings: Ensuring timely supply and administration of medicines when patients move between home, hospital, and hospice.
  4. Interdisciplinary Integration: Pharmacists work closely with doctors, nurses, and social workers to align medication plans with patient goals.
  5. Advocacy & Safety: Preventing medication errors and ensuring access to essential drugs, which is critical because poor medicines management can lead to unnecessary suffering and hospital admissions. [pharmaceut…ournal.com], [pharmacytimes.com], [uspharmacist.com]

In short: Palliative care in pharmacy is about safe, effective, and compassionate medication management to relieve symptoms and support patients and families during serious illness.

Resources

Here are some excellent resources for palliative care in pharmacy practice, including UK-specific and NHS Highland options:

UK & General Pharmacy Resources

  1. Specialist Pharmacy Service (SPS) – Palliative Care Resources
    • Guidance on opioid switching, symptom management, and medicines for swallowing difficulties.
    • Includes links to Clinical Knowledge Summaries and BNF guidance.
      Access SPS Resources [sps.nhs.uk]
  2. Royal Pharmaceutical Society – Daffodil Standards
  3. Association of Supportive and Palliative Care Pharmacy (ASPCP)
    • Professional network, educational events, and practice-sharing resources.
    • Free membership available.
      Join ASPCP [aspcp.uk]
  4. Palliative Care Formulary (PCF)
  5. CPPE Palliative Care Learning

CP Palliative Care JIC Stocklist & Info Resources

End of Life Care Together – 24 hour Helpline

Palliative Care Anticipatory Care (JIC) Prescribing Guide and CP Stockholder List (December 2023)

Palliative Care Model Scheme agreement form April 2015

Palliative care Service Specification 2017- 2018 

PCH referral form A4