The Nova Scotia Pharmacy Regulator (NSPR) has launched a new awareness campaign – Redefining Pharmacy Care – that highlights to the public that pharmacists have the knowledge and skills to treat a broad range of their healthcare needs.
As part of the campaign, the NSPR has formally submitted a proposal to the Oxford English Dictionary to update its definition of “pharmacist”, moving away from an outdated understanding of the pharmacist’s role that is limited to preparing and dispensing medications, to one that reflects the full healthcare professional role that they serve in meeting the care needs of their patients in 2025.
The NSPR has been collaborating with the provincial government and other system partners over the past decade to ensure that the public receives the full benefit of pharmacists’ knowledge and expertise. In recent years, this has included ensuring that pharmacists are working to their full scope, which refers to the healthcare they are educated and permitted to deliver in Nova Scotia. Pharmacists are being repositioned in primary care delivery, including:
• assessing patients to prescribe renewals of their medication;
• adjusting the dose of the medication or changing to a different medication, when appropriate; and
• treating patients for common conditions like shingles, Strep throat, and uncomplicated bladder infections.
“We work on behalf of all Nova Scotians so that they can get the full benefit of their pharmacist’s expertise and be confident in the quality of care they receive,” says Beverley Zwicker, NSPR CEO & Registrar. “This is about making sure it is competence, not tradition, that determines the care a healthcare professional can provide. Now more than ever, we need to ensure that our healthcare system makes full use of pharmacists as healthcare professionals and medication experts.”
The public awareness campaign includes social media, billboards, and transit shelter ads. These visuals showcase a more comprehensive definition that better reflects the full range of a pharmacist’s knowledge and the care they are providing.
Nova Scotians are encouraged to visit the campaign website at redefiningpharmacycare.ca to learn more about the healthcare available from their pharmacist.
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About the Nova Scotia Pharmacy Regulator (NSPR) The Nova Scotia Pharmacy Regulator (formerly Nova Scotia College of Pharmacists) is the regulatory body for licensed pharmacists, pharmacy technicians, and the community pharmacies where they practice. It governs the practice of pharmacy in the interest of the health and well-being of the public, working to ensure that all Nova Scotians can access safe, quality pharmacy care.