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Reference
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27 May 2014
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DAVIS
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Reference Hon. D. M. DAVIS (Minister for Health) -- I move: That, noting the Australian Health Practitioner Regulation Agency 2012-13 annual report, particularly as it relates to the registration of pharmacists in Victoria, this house requires the Legal and Social Issues Legislation Committee to inquire into and report by 14 October 2014 on the role and opportunities for community pharmacy in primary and preventive care in Victoria. Our community pharmacists are a very important group in the community. Every High Street in the state pretty much has a pharmacy, and generally these pharmacies are run by local people. There are of course some larger chains. Pharmacists are trusted and respected by the community as people who have a high level of tertiary qualifications enabling them to provide strong support to their patients. They act primarily through the dispensing of medicines and advice, dispensing medicines primarily through prescriptions written by GPs and other specialists. Those prescriptions are filled by pharmacists, and support is provided by the federal government through the pharmaceutical benefits scheme, which is an important scheme. An opportunity is there for our pharmacists to play a significant and wider role. Changes have been made where the pharmacist's role has been enhanced in some jurisdictions, particularly in Queensland and the Northern Territory, for the administration of vaccinations. There is also potential for an enhanced and wider management role, including in the post-acute setting and aged care, particularly in the country -- that is, in rural and regional areas. Potentially there is also a wider role for them in reducing some pressures on our hospitals and emergency departments by providing advice and referrals that may be timely or appropriate. As pharmacists encounter patients they may well be in a position to provide them with useful advice about where they might seek further treatment. Pharmacists are not only in the community setting but also in our major hospitals, both public and private, providing a very important service as hospital pharmacists, and on some occasions they are in our community health centres as well. This reference seeks to look at opportunities for community pharmacy in primary and preventive care in Victoria, drawing on what is available in other jurisdictions, particularly some of the other Australian states, as I have outlined. I note that there is a lack of remuneration for any expanded service role, and that is something the committee may wish to examine. There is a range of views about the roles of pharmacists in these circumstances, and the role of the committee in this context is to look at the registration context, noting that the registration of pharmacists, like that of all health professionals, is aimed directly at securing public safety and ensuring that those who are registered provide safe and effective services in a way the community is able to feel confidence in. The Australian Health Practitioner Regulation Agency and our national registration arrangements do that, following on from the regime that previously operated in Victoria. I note that the Victorian Pharmacy Authority provides regulatory arrangements relating to pharmacy premises. It is not my intention that this inquiry be fundamentally focused on the question of the role of pharmacy premises and so forth and the ownership of pharmacies.
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There are longstanding debates about this. The Productivity Commission has had things to say about those matters and I am not, through this reference, seeking to relitigate or redebate those points that I regard as currently settled in the Victorian context. But it is fair to say that pharmacy faces some significant challenges in terms of workforce. A number of pharmacies are facing difficult times, and in that context, with a highly trained professional group that is well dispersed throughout the community, is trusted and can be relied upon by the community, and is registered with an appropriate level of oversight and regulation, there is the potential to ask what other activities pharmacists could undertake to contribute to the health system in our community. I know a number of medical groups have divergent views, and I am not prejudging these matters in any way. I know that these groups -- the Australian Medical Association in particular and others -- will make their views known. In a sense this process would seek to see if through the registration arrangements there is any impediment to or other restriction on pharmacists doing more safely or trialling different approaches and different scopes in a safe way that would be consistent with their registration requirements and rules. Community pharmacy could provide more personalised medication management services targeted to a cohort of older Victorians who are at risk of hospital admission or readmission and enable them to remain living independently for longer and with greater choice. That might be in the home or it could be in an aged-care service, so there may be some opportunities there, and I would be interested in the community's views in that context. The issue of immunisation has been discussed in other jurisdictions. Internationally vaccination by community pharmacists has become commonplace, with experiences reported as overwhelmingly positive. Pharmacists commonly administer a range of vaccines in countries including the USA, Canada, the United Kingdom and New Zealand. As I said, these are being piloted in Queensland and the Northern Territory. The Pharmacy Board of Australia has now recognised that vaccination is within a pharmacist's scope of practice once guidelines and training requirements are established. As I understand it, this process is under way. In addition to increasing accessibility and reducing costs, the availability of pharmacist vaccinators may mean the risk of a major influenza pandemic is able to be managed more effectively. But I seek the community's input on a number of those matters. The issue of avoidable hospital admissions is another area of interest in terms of the role pharmacists could play. Certainly when patients are discharged from a major facility the local pharmacist has, as has the local GP, a significant role to play, and the linkages and arrangements that can be struck in that context are important. The provision of certain advice about wound care may also be a role that pharmacists could play, and the role of referring and directing patients to other services is a critical one. Accessible service delivery models in regional and remote areas are potentially also an important addition. A community pharmacist could facilitate initiatives such as telehealth. In some towns the pharmacist is a major service provider and in some cases virtually the only permanent service provider. In those circumstances the question is: what role could pharmacists usefully and safely play in the community's interest? I think this is one of those references where a number of factors are aligning, including trials in other states and a desire by community pharmacists to extend or enhance their role in the provision of some primary and preventive health services which may well be efficient and safe. Equally there are significant financial challenges for the community pharmacy sector with the likelihood of reduced employment for both pharmacists and their staff. In those circumstances it may be that the pharmacy will play a greater role. The committee should look at this and examine what is in the community's interest, what is feasible and what reasonable steps could be taken in this area to weigh and balance the evidence that is put to it and seek some logical consensus which could inform government policy into the future.
Ms HARTLAND (Western Metropolitan) -- I am also somewhat surprised by this reference, mainly because it does not appear to be going to the appropriate committee. I will move an amendment later that this reference should go to the Legal and Social Issues References Committee rather than the Legal and Social Issues Legislation Committee. As I understand it, if you make a reference to the Legal and Social Issues Legislation Committee, you need to actually present legislation or it needs to refer to an annual report. The minister might be able to direct me, but I have read the Australian Health Practitioner Regulation Agency (AHPRA) annual report, and I cannot find a reference to community pharmacists in it. In his right of reply I would very much like the minister to direct me to the page in the AHPRA annual report that refers to community pharmacies. What I found really interesting during the minister's contribution was that he talked at length about the idea of trialling vaccinations at pharmacies. I have done quite a bit of reading on this, and I know that it is occurring in England and has occurred in the United States. It is something we should be looking at. I would have thought that references to a committee, especially from a minister, should be succinct and have an achievable outcome rather than this incredibly vague, 'Let's look at what they might or might not be doing' reference that we have here, which is: That, noting the Australian Health Practitioner Regulation Agency 2012-13 annual report, particularly as it relates to the registration of pharmacists in Victoria, this house requires the Legal and Social Issues Legislation Committee to inquire into and report by 14 October 2014 on the role and opportunities for community pharmacy in primary and preventive care in Victoria. That is really vague. I agree with Ms Mikakos that this reference is about keeping the committee busy rather than doing beneficial work. I also find interesting the number of references that have been attempted to be moved in this house that have been rejected by the government, as Ms Mikakos has pointed out, yet now we have an extremely vague reference that does not really say what we should or should not do. It is basically an attempt to keep us busy until October. If the minister had actually put forward a reference on the vaccinations that could be done by community pharmacies, that would have been a really interesting thing to do, and it could have been helpful. This reference is extremely vague, and it is not necessary. Greens amendment circulated by Ms HARTLAND (Western Metropolitan) pursuant to standing orders. I move: That 'Legal and Social Issues Legislation' be omitted with the view of inserting in its place 'Legal and Social Issues References'. The clear reason why I am doing this is that the reference is not about legislation and what it is about is not in the annual report, so it should go to the references committee.
Hon. D. M. DAVIS (Minister for Health) -- I thank members for their contributions. I indicate that the government will oppose the proposed amendment by Ms Hartland. It is entirely appropriate for the reference to go to the legislation committee. It relates directly to the registration of pharmacists, which is canvassed in the annual report. One of the 14 boards of the Australian Health Practitioner Regulation Agency (AHPRA) is the pharmacy board, and it is responsible for the registration of pharmacists at a state and national level. Ms Hartland -- What page was that? Hon. D. M. DAVIS -- I do not have the report in front of me, but pharmacists are registered by AHPRA, and these matters relate directly to the registration requirements and the work of that registration board. In response to the idea that this is in some way a general reference, I note that it is about opportunities for community pharmacists, as opposed to hospital pharmacists or pharmacists employed in major public settings, and I have enumerated the opportunities for community pharmacists at length. I am pleased to see that both the non-government parties have indicated that they can see at least some areas of merit where they could add value in this area. Pharmacy is a major professional group. It faces some significant challenges. If those in the non-government parties do not understand the significance of this group, that is disappointing. If they do not understand the significance of the primary care contribution that can be made by community pharmacists, that is very disappointing indeed. The government will proceed with this reference. We believe it will provide useful information. As I said, I
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have had discussions with the Pharmacy Guild of Australia, others in the pharmacy profession and community pharmacists more generally about these matters and about the opportunities. Ministers for health at a national level have discussed a number of these matters as well. I have pointed to trials and other arrangements available in both Australia and other jurisdictions that could be examined for potential use in Victoria. I would welcome the input of the committee on those matters. House divided on amendment: Ayes, 17 Barber, Mr Mikakos, Ms Darveniza, Ms Pennicuik, Ms Eideh, Mr Pulford, Ms Elasmar, Mr (Teller) Scheffer, Mr Hartland, Ms Somyurek, Mr Jennings, Mr Tarlamis, Mr Leane, Mr Tee, Mr Lenders, Mr Tierney, Ms (Teller) Melhem, Mr Noes, 19 Atkinson, Mr Lovell, Ms Coote, Mrs Millar, Mrs Crozier, Ms O'Brien, Mr D. D. Dalla-Riva, Mr (Teller) O'Brien, Mr D. R. J. Davis, Mr D. O'Donohue, Mr Drum, Mr Peulich, Mrs Elsbury, Mr Ramsay, Mr Finn, Mr Rich-Phillips, Mr Guy, Mr Ronalds, Mr (Teller) Koch, Mr Pairs ALP vacancy Ondarchie, Mr Viney, Mr Kronberg, Mrs Amendment negatived. Motion agreed to.
Ms MIKAKOS (Northern Metropolitan) -- I rise to indicate to the house that the Labor opposition will not be opposing this motion and the reference to this committee. However, we have a number of reservations. The first one relates to the fact that the government has chosen yet again to refer to an upper house committee a matter which is designed to ensure that the committee does not have to actually deal with some of the pressing issues facing Victoria. For example, the committee could do exactly what the Leader of the Government suggested in a recent sitting week -- that is, go about its business as a legislation committee as set out in the standing orders and call the Secretary of the Department of Health to give evidence to the committee in respect of the department's annual report.
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The committee could look at some of the many pressing issues facing Victoria's health system at the moment, including the crisis in our emergency departments, the crisis in terms of the growing number of people waiting for elective surgery in our hospitals or the ambulance crisis facing the state at the moment. There are many issues, the most recent being the implications of the federal government's cuts to the health budget and the impact this will have on our state hospitals and our state health system, which we heard about just today. Yet the minister, who is also the Leader of the Government, has chosen not to give the committee such a reference, which would actually be timely and useful in terms of providing information and advice to government in respect of these issues. Instead he has chosen to give the committee what I think is a very innocuous reference in respect of pharmacies. Up until this point it was not clear what the minister wanted the committee to look at, given the reference only relates to the role and opportunities for community pharmacies in primary and preventive care. The point I make is that up to this time the upper house committees have had 59 attempted references in total, of which only 11 were passed and 48 were defeated. The Legal and Social Issues Legislation Committee, of which I happen to be a member, has had sent to it only one bill that was passed by this house, and that related to a very non-controversial bill in respect of international wills. The government has chosen to send a reference to a committee which is chaired by a government member and on which it has the numbers rather than send this reference to the Legal and Social Issues References Committee, which would be the more appropriate place for a reference of this nature. We would be very supportive of any attempt to have the reference go to the Legal and Social Issues References Committee because that would be a more appropriate place for it. Without disclosing the discussions that members of the committee have had around this reference, I believe that the reference itself leaves a lot to be desired. The minister, in his contribution to the debate on this motion, set out a whole lot of issues that he would like the committee to look at, yet all or some of those matters could have been explicitly set out in the terms of reference -- for example, the minister referred to trials in other states, immunisation, the impact on regional areas and on aged care and a whole lot of other issues which could have been made part of the reference. This just demonstrates the haste with which this motion was cobbled together by the minister and his office in order to give this committee some work to do. We know that the government is keen to have the upper house committees meet. We had the absurd situation during the last sitting week where a meeting of this committee was called. There was no business when that meeting was called; it was called for the purpose of not allowing general business to be debated on Wednesday evening, to curtail debate and to have the house rise at the dinner break. This is why we on this side of the house are extremely cynical when it comes to the minister's motivations. We have a hastily cobbled together motion when the minister could have put a proposition that he wished us to test with respect to the pharmacy sector and some proposed reform or change that he is prepared to consider. But of course the reference does not contain any proposition for reforms. It does not contain any prescriptive ideas in terms of what he would like us to consider. It is clear that this was designed to keep the committee busy and give it something to do so that it can meet on Wednesday evenings until the election is called. We are cynical about this for this reason. Of course we all agree that pharmacists do a terrific job. I have needed to make frequent use of pharmacies over the last few days. They provide enormous support to many people in the community, particularly those with chronic illness and the elderly, who have many different health conditions. These are the people the minister and members of the government should be standing up for when it comes to the $7 GP tax that their federal colleagues are imposing. We saw some feigned outrage from the Minister for Health earlier in question time when it came to discussing the implications of the federal health cuts. The best he could do was resort to quoting Dr Seuss and talking about green eggs and ham, which had all of us on this side of the house perplexed. We still have no idea what the minister was going on about in his contribution. If the upper house committees are to do the job they were intended to do and if the government is to take them seriously, then it is important that government members give some thought to these references, provide greater guidance and clarity not just to committee members but also to the community more widely and the sector the reference relates to -- in this case it is pharmacies -- and actually put to them some proposed ideas for reform. The minister has not done that in this case. It is all about a very open-ended reference that is just intended to keep the committee busy. I hope the committee is able to do some good work through this reference, but we really have to
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question the lack of thought the minister has put into the reference to this point. He has failed to outline in the reference any of the propositions and ideas he mentioned in his contribution today. Some of these matters could have been set out in the reference itself.