Casdon
Sorry if this is a bit of an essay, but it’s not true now, although maybe it was more so 20 years ago.
Community pharmacies have been involved in diagnostics for decades, offering a range of services including pregnancy testing and blood pressure checks, mole inspections and anticoagulant monitoring.
Many diagnostic services in pharmacies involve more than simply asking customers to take a test, with the pharmacy team involved in giving treatment advice and support as well.
Pharmacists are highly trained if they become prescribers, and they work within very tightly governed protocols. For common conditions requiring antibiotics, a community pharmacist will be a safe alternative to seeing a GP. They already treat patients with all sorts of other conditions.
Pharmacists are also hugely valued members of GP practice teams, they are highly sought after and there are not enough of them to meet the demand from practices. It’s very common for GPS to refer patients within the practice to the pharmacist, as they understand far more about drug interactions than the average GP, and keep patients with multiple co-morbidities safer.
This is a complementary, and equal quality service to GP care for specific conditions, which modern GPs value greatly because it allows them to concentrate on complex cases who really do need GP expertise.
This - according to the NHS website - is what pharmacists study: preparation of medicines. action and uses of drugs and medicines including physiology, biochemistry, microbiology, pathology and pharmacology. pharmacy practice, covering laws and standards, managing symptoms, promoting healthy lifestyles and advising on drug therapy and medicines use.
The fact that "Community pharmacies have been involved in diagnostics for decades," does not make it right - it is simply a reflection of the fact that there are insufficient doctors.
The first rule of medicine (after Do No Harm) is that diagnosis precedes treatment and that diagnosis needs to be made by a medically qualified person.
I have had excellent help from pharmacists in hospital. The consultant called them in to find a way of dealing with my intractable pain, coupled with drug sensitivities.
Pharmacists are excellent in their knowledge of drugs, their interactions and uses but they are NOT diagnosticians, nor should they be asked to be ... unless of course they undergo medical training.
They should not be used to plug gaps in medical services. We are gradually sliding into a situation where non qualified people are making diagnoses and we must resist this.