The NHS Community Pharmacy Blood Pressure Check Service (also known as the NHS Community Pharmacy Hypertension Case-Finding Advanced Service) started on 1 October 2021.
Important Update for Contractors
The expanded NHS Community Pharmacy Blood Pressure Check Service launched on Friday 1 December 2023 which allows non-registered staff to take blood pressure readings.
NHS England received a few queries about this, and we wanted to clarify that blood pressure readings taken by non-registered staff should, for now, be recorded under the responsible pharmacist’s name and General Pharmaceutical Council (GPhC) number. This is because the pharmacist continues to be responsible for the delivery of the service.
NHS England is working with the NHSBSA and system suppliers to amend consultation record templates to allow non-registered staff member details to be recorded in due course.
Any further queries about the service changes should be emailed to the Pharmacy Integration Team at england.pharmacyintegration@nhs.net.
Thank you for all you do to support patients in England.
Aims of the service
The aims and objectives of this service are to:
- identify people aged 40 years or older with high blood pressure, who have previously not had a confirmed diagnosis of hypertension, and to refer them to general practice to confirm diagnosis and for appropriate management (this can include people under 40 years, at the discretion of a pharmacist)
- undertake clinic and ambulatory blood pressure checks when necessary, at the request of a general practice
- promote healthy behaviours to service users
What the service will provide
The agreement is for a pharmacist to measure the blood pressure of adults.
At the end of a patient consultation, where readings indicate:
- normal blood pressure - the pharmacist will promote healthy behaviours
- high blood pressure - the pharmacist will offer Ambulatory Blood Pressure Monitoring (ABPM) from the pharmacy and will also promote healthy behaviours
- very high blood pressure - the pharmacist will urgently refer the patient to see their GP within 24 hours
- low blood pressure - the pharmacist will provide appropriate advice
Practices can refer patients to community pharmacies for either clinic readings or ambulatory measurements. This supports practices in their restoration and recovery work. Practices and pharmacies can work together locally to agree how the referrals are made. Two examples where this may be helpful to practices are:
- the community pharmacy is asked to measure the blood pressure of patients diagnosed with hypertension where the practice has no recent blood pressure measurement recorded
- the community pharmacy is asked to measure the ambulatory blood pressure of patients who have had a high clinic reading but have not yet been followed up with home or ambulatory monitoring
Service specification
The service specification can be found on the NHS England website.