www.nspharmacy.ca, the official website of the Nova Scotia Pharmacy Regulator (NSPR), provides information about the pharmacy regulator, pharmacist and pharmacy technician registration, pharmacy licensure, and pharmacy practice in our province.

The information on this site is intended as a resource to pharmacy professionals and future pharmacy professionals, and to the public.

Public interpretation of health information on this site should not be substituted for the advice of a healthcare professional. For specific health matters, visitors to this site are encouraged to consult their pharmacist or other appropriate healthcare provider.

Occasionally, alternate websites are referenced on this site. This does not imply an endorsement by NSPR. The Nova Scotia Pharmacy Regulator does not endorse specific organizations, products, or therapies.

Nova Scotia Pharmacy Regulator is located in Mi’kma’ki, the ancestral and unceded territory of the Mi’kmaq People, and we acknowledge them as the past, present, and future caretakers of this land.

We respect and honour the Peace and Friendship Treaties that were signed in this territory, setting the terms of coexistence between settlers and the Mi’kmaq people. These Treaties remain in place today.

We recognize our responsibility to uphold the Treaties in the spirit of Reconciliation and collaboration. We acknowledge the harms that have created and continue to create health inequities for Mi’kmaq People, and we commit to moving forward in partnership.

We are all Treaty People.

We recognize the histories, legacies and contributions of African Nova Scotians, a distinct people with connections to the original 52 land-based Black communities. African Nova Scotians have been a key part of enriching the culture and history of Mi’kma’ki for more than 400 years.

Mi’kma’ki includes all of Nova Scotia, Prince Edward Island, part of New Brunswick, the Gaspé region of Quebec, part of Maine, and southwestern Newfoundland.

November 24, 2025

StaffWISE project Part 2: Exploring pharmacy practice environment issues in Nova Scotia

Read the second publication in our series of short papers reporting on the Nova Scotia Pharmacy Regulator’s Staffing and Workload Initiative for Safety and Effectiveness (StaffWISE) project. Click the button below to access the full article.

The Nova Scotia Scotia Pharmacy Regulator (NSPR) issued a regulatory requirement in 2001 that a pharmacy must have a staffing plan in place that is commensurate with patient care needs. Although this requirement has existed for more than 20 years, concerns brought forward from pharmacy professionals about their workplace conditions, including being understaffed, have steadily increased over the last several years. Although workplace conditions were traditionally seen as a responsibility for advocacy organizations, the NSPR became concerned about the impact of the pharmacy practice environment on quality of care and patient safety.