FIP Statement of Professional Standards (Code of Ethics)
FIP Statement of Professional Standards (Code of Ethics)
FIP Statement of Professional Standards (Code of Ethics)
Maintaining competence throughout a career, during which new and challenging professional
responsibilities will be encountered, is a fundamental ethical requirement for all health professionals.
This statement on Continuing Professional Development establishes a framework within which this
obligation can be met.
Pharmacists are health care professionals whose professional responsibilities include seeking to ensure
that people derive maximum therapeutic benefit from their treatments with medicines. This requires them
to keep abreast of developments in pharmacy practice and the pharmaceutical sciences, professional
standards requirements, the laws governing pharmacy and medicines and advances in knowledge and
technology relating to use of medicines.
(1) FIP Statement on Professional Standards: Code of Ethics Pharmacists, Vancouver 1997.
(2) FIP Guidelines on Good Pharmacy Practice (GPP) in Community and Hospital Pharmacy Settings - Standards for
Quality of Pharmaceutical Services, Tokyo 1993 (revised in 1997), as approved by WHO in April 1997
(3) FIP Policy Statement on Good Pharmacy Education Practice, Vienna 2000.
The regulatory bodies for pharmacists in some countries already require, and others are moving towards
requiring, demonstration, at stated intervals, of participation in CPD, as a pre-requisite for the
revalidation of the right to practise. This is likely to become a general pattern. Patients have a right to be
confident that professionals providing health care remain competent throughout their working lives. They
will expect governments, accreditation agencies and other pharmacy bodies with a legitimate interest, to
seek assurances that regulatory bodies are taking the necessary action to achieve this goal.
Definitions
CPD is more than participation in Continuing Education (CE) which, on its own, does not necessarily
lead to positive changes in professional practice nor does it necessarily improve healthcare outcomes(4).
CE is, however, an important part of a structured CPD programme, personalised for each pharmacist.
The process should be visible to ensure credibility with the public.
It must be an ongoing, cyclical process of continuous quality improvement by which pharmacists seek to
maintain and enhance their competence in both current duties and anticipated future service
developments.
An illustration of the cyclical programme, with appropriate details, is described in the Annex.
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Approved by FIP Council in Nice in September 2002 2
Recommendations
Recognising the requirement for practising pharmacists to maintain competence as practitioners through
CPD which involves pharmacists in:
• Assessing their learning and development needs;
• Planning and implementing a structured learning programme; and
• Recording and evaluating the resulting improvements in their professional practice
FIP recommends that national pharmaceutical associations in co-operation, where appropriate, with
schools and faculties of pharmacy and other education providers
1. establish national learning needs;
2. motivate pharmacists by demonstrating how individual competence can be improved and thus the
advantage of participation in CPD;
3. raise awareness of appropriate frameworks for personal development plans and recording systems;
4. provide opportunities for CPD by facilitating the provision of a wide range of CE programmes in a
variety of formats.
5. ensure that opportunities are available for individual pharmacists to learn how to draw up SMART
plans (Specific, Measurable, Achievable, Realistic and Timed) for a personalised programme of
CPD;
6. establish mechanisms for individual evaluations including questionnaires, checklists, rating scales and
self-assessment tests, which are effective and are easy to apply for all types of CPD activity;
7. recommend standards for CE providers and be part of any accreditation system.
8. provide the knowledge and share resources for CE programmes, which are based on pharmacists’
competence to practise;
9. establish quality assurance systems for CPD activities against the learning objectives.
For its part, FIP will encourage international collaboration, to include exchange of information, by those
involved at national level in all aspects of CPD programmes.
Conclusion
Commitment by each individual to participation in structured CPD is essential for all practising
pharmacists. In the care of a patient, contemporary, competent practice will require continuous
improvement in skills and performance.
As well as demonstrating professional commitment, participation in structured CPD will provide for
flexible career choices, enhance career satisfaction and improve patient care.
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Approved by FIP Council in Nice in September 2002 3
Annex
SELF-APPRAISAL
(1)
PERSONAL PLAN
(2)
EVALUATION
(5)
ACTION
(IMPLEMENTATION)
(3)
DOCUMENTATION
(4)
Defining of steps