There has been a further call for the return of any oxygen cylinders currently not being used to any community pharmacy.

As with any patient returns at this time, caution should be taken when accepting returns, and appropriate decontamination measures should be taken. Please see a copy of the poster (previously circulated in March). You may wish to display this in your pharmacy.

Any assistance you can provide would be welcomed to support the ongoing COVID-19 situation.  

The Pharmacy First Winter Ailments service will operate again in community pharmacies from 2ndNovember 2020 until 31stMarch 2021.

The following service resources are available, on the dedicated Pharmacy First webpage on this website, available here.

  • Service specification 20/21
  • Service guide for community pharmacists 20/21
  • Service Contract 20/21 – this should be signed and returned via email to your local HSCB office before you commence the service
  • Privacy notice template
  • Advice sheet for sore throat and common cold
  • Advice sheet for patients with symptoms of Coronavirus
  • Pharmacy First Monthly Record Form

CPNI have produced a 15 minute Pharmacy First training webinar, which we hope you find useful, available here. It should be used alongside the service specification and guidance to train all members of the pharmacy team involved in service delivery.

Printed copies of the service posters will be distributed to contracted pharmacies. Pharmacies may also wish to promote the Pharmacy First service on their social media accounts, using the patient information leaflet available on the BSO website. Pharmacy First communications will be shared on CPNI’s social media channels, please feel free to share.

If you have any queries in relation to the service please contact the pharmacy advisor in your local HSCB office or Kerry Grimes in the CPNI office.


By James McCaughan, Chair, Community Pharmacy NI

Looking back on part of ‘Ask Your Pharmacist Week’, pharmacies across Northern Ireland showcased the range and quality of care they provide on a daily basis to all of those within their communities. Of course, the week has also allowed time to reflect on the services provided by our community pharmacies throughout the fight against Covid-19.

There is no doubt that Covid-19 has changed the face of community pharmacy. We are one of the key primary healthcare providers on the ground, ensuring that the safe supply of medicines is assured, and our patients and communities remain healthy and looked after. This is a role which we do not take lightly.

Since the beginning of the pandemic, the community pharmacy workforce has stepped up to the mark and shown extraordinary strength and resilience under mounting pressure rarely experienced before.

We got back to our core service and adapted so that we could support our communities in the safest way possible. New measures had to be introduced quickly including screens and social distancing. Our working practices changed, literally overnight, and so did much of our lives. Hours increased, services changed, but the commitment of our local pharmacists remained. As an organisation, we are incredibly thankful for this.  

Moreover, as GPs became less accessible, local community pharmacies became the first port of call for anyone managing a lifelong condition or experiencing illness. From the beginning of the pandemic we have been inundated with patients, with local pharmacies across Northern Ireland seeing on average 40,000 more people per week. At several points we were seriously understaffed with 30% of pharmacists self-isolating, meaning those still working were doing 70-hour weeks.

Community Pharmacists have proven their valuable role during this time. During a period of uncertainty and fear, they have been a steady hand of reassurance, advice, and support for many people, including some of the most vulnerable in our local communities. I am proud of the work of my colleagues who stepped up to the plate when they were called upon.

In addition this year, we have focused on the expansion of our services within public health, including the free winter flu vaccine service offered to all health and social care staff, the Minor Ailments Service and the Pharmacy First programme. All of these services are working to ease pressures across the health service, allowing our HSC colleagues in areas such as GP surgeries and Emergency Departments to focus on critical patients and work towards ensuring accessible services are provided within all our communities.

Moving into winter, we are calling on everyone to pull together and work with us so we can continue to serve and provide for our communities with the same high standard of service delivered up to this point.

Whilst this period presents us with additional challenges in terms of services, we remain as committed and driven as ever to continue to help those who need us. Covid-19 has shown that the Northern Ireland health service is strong and resilient, but it is not unbreakable. We need to all work together and meet these challenges together and united.