Pharmacy Board ignores evidence in pursuit of risky prescribing agenda
Patients are at risk of poorer health outcomes with the Pharmacy Board of Australia’s consultation process suppressing debate about its proposed endorsement model for autonomous pharmacy prescribing.
In a joint letter to the board, the Australian Medical Association (AMA) and the Royal Australian College of General Practitioners (RACGP) expressed disappointment in the board’s uncollaborative pursuit of widespread pharmacy prescribing.
AMA President Dr Danielle McMullen said the Pharmacy Board showed a complete disregard for meaningful debate at its recent national forum and restricted opportunities for stakeholders to raise concerns about the proposed endorsement, which could potentially support pharmacists prescribing Schedule 4 and 8 medicines.
“The board set the forum up in a way that ensured any opposing views — even when grounded in rigorous evidence and supported by data — were discouraged,” Dr McMullen said.
“Australia has traditionally restricted prescribing to medical practitioners, which remains the safest and preferred model. If health ministers and the board are intent on changing this, it’s important to recognise that global evidence shows the most effective non-medical prescribing models involve pharmacists working as part of a collaborative clinical team. This approach is essential to preventing fragmented patient care.
“However, the board chose to hold a forum where key issues were excluded from discussion. It appeared intent on supporting a model that risks fragmenting care, creating conflicts of interest, and removing a key safeguard for patient safety — by supporting pharmacists to both prescribe and dispense medicines.
“If the board chooses to ignore the evidence-based concerns that we tried to raise during this forum, then Australia will go down the same track as the National Health Service in the UK.
“Australia has a strong health system, and we should build on what works rather than adopt ideas from other countries that have been independently assessed as having poorer healthcare outcomes.”
The AMA and RACGP urge the Pharmacy Board to reconsider its consultation process by enabling a more meaningful and substantive dialogue that addresses legitimate concerns about the proposed model.
RACGP President Dr Michael Wright said ensuring patient safety must remain the cornerstone of any healthcare reform — not profit over patients.
“Recent discussions around pharmacy prescribing have raised serious concerns. We’ve already seen the risks of prioritising profit in the telehealth space, and it is critical that these mistakes are not repeated in the rollout of pharmacy-based prescribing,” Dr Wright said.
“The forum was not constructive in terms of genuinely attempting to explore the real issues. While there was some acknowledgement of the conflict-of-interest pharmacists face when both prescribing and selling medications, there was little substantive discussion on how to address this issue. This silence is troubling and will have serious consequences for patients.
“There appeared to be a lack of understanding and desire to deal with the risks involved in expanding prescribing rights to all medications. Of particular concern is the absence of safeguards around Schedule 8 medications, and the broader risks of fragmented care and patient confusion when multiple providers deliver overlapping services.
“The future of healthcare is collaborative, and that collaboration must be safe, structured, and centred on patient wellbeing.
“GPs and pharmacists each bring vital expertise to the healthcare system. But integration must never come at the cost of clinical rigour or trusted care. We will continue to advocate for a model that prioritises safety over shortcuts, because we know that when healthcare is rushed, patients bear the risk.
“The GP–patient relationship is built on trust, continuity, and clinical judgement. Undermining that relationship for the sake of profit is not progress, it’s a step backwards, and one we cannot afford to take.”