Skills required for medicines management
If you’re interested in working in medicines management, broadly, there are two profiles for medicine management — Administrator or a Base Coordinator. For both, you need to be able to work on your own initiative but follow processes and procedures. Flexibility and being supportive of the rest of the team is key.
Explaining further, Dawn says, “For a Pharmacy Technician role, you have to be a registered and qualified person, while for the Base Coordinator and the Medicines Management Administrator, which do the day-to-day delivery and stock counts, you must have good communication skills, be hands-on and practical.”
“My advice to someone joining would be — it’s a lovely team and the role takes you out of the office — you are out and about. You’re going to be out on your own a lot and must be able to drive. It’s a huge responsibility to deliver medicines safely, and to make sure that they are safe to use, well within the expiry date and the equipment and consumable products too are of good quality and standard,” says Dawn.
While for Georgia, a lot of the learning has been on-the-job. “There are a lot of mandatory things that you need to do as part of the organisation and we encourage everyone to do that in their first few days. But going out and observing someone doing the role, reading the processes, and understanding them, is important,” she says.
Support from the organisation during COVID
The last 15 months have not been easy due to COVID but both Georgia and Dawn look back and say the management team at HUC and the CCG have been extremely supportive and helpful during those times. “We’ve had quite a lot of support in obtaining PPE during desperate times at the start of the pandemic. They have supported us in the decision to have minimised visits to the bases, in order to avoid contact with potential patients and minimize the contact in the bases as well. We try to do some hours from home, however, there are some tasks for which we have to be there at the base, so we plan accordingly to have minimum contact,” they both agree.
“It has been a challenging year with COVID but we’re very supportive of each other. We work well as a team and are really proud of our achievements in the last 15 months. The Cambridgeshire and Peterborough team have also worked on training programmes to reinforce the messages of proper processes and procedures for our Drivers and Receptionists, base staff, new starters, and others who needed training to follow the system. We developed a training programme and started delivering that in March. So far, we trained 30 colleagues and hoping now that we will roll it out to new starters so that as soon as they start, we’ll have an induction session with them. We’ve had some positive feedback on that and I’m so very proud of our work this year,” adds Dawn.