RT Journal Article SR Electronic T1 Evolution of the general practice pharmacist’s role in England: a longitudinal study JF British Journal of General Practice JO Br J Gen Pract FD British Journal of General Practice SP e727 OP e734 DO 10.3399/bjgp18X698849 VO 68 IS 675 A1 Fay Bradley A1 Elizabeth Seston A1 Ceinwen Mannall A1 Chris Cutts YR 2018 UL http://bjgp.org/content/68/675/e727.abstract AB Background To address the growing GP workforce crisis, NHS England (NHSE) launched the Clinical Pharmacists in General Practice scheme in 2015. The NHSE scheme promotes a newer, patient-facing role for pharmacists and, currently, there is little insight into the role and activities undertaken. All scheme pharmacists are enrolled on the general practice pharmacist training pathway (GPPTP).Aim To investigate the role evolution and integration of clinical pharmacists in general practice in England.Design and setting Longitudinal survey of all phase 1 GPPTP registrants working in general practice at start of (T1) and 6 months into (T2) training.Method An online longitudinal survey was administered to all phase 1 GPPTP registrants (n = 457) at T1 and T2, measuring their perceived knowledge, skill, and confidence, activities performed, and perceptions of practice integration, environment, and support. Descriptive statistics and non-parametric tests were conducted.Results Response rates were 46% (T1) and 52% (T2); 158 participants completed both questionnaires. Perceived knowledge, skill, and confidence levels increased significantly from T1 to T2 for all areas, except for managing acute or common illness. Scope of practice increased significantly, particularly in patient-facing activities. Sharing office space with administrative staff was common and 13% of participants reported having no designated work area. Perceived integration at T2 was fairly high (median = 5 on a scale of 1–7) but GP clinical support was ‘too little’ according to one-third of participants.Conclusion Findings show not only patient-facing role expansion, but also practice environment and support issues. Pharmacists may appreciate more GP time invested in their development. Practices need to be realistic about this support and not expect an immediate reduction in workload.