The following page provides information on
The following section provides some general information about the FTY supervisor induction. For those supervisors who have received their approval from NES, pre-work and details of the supervisor induction session can be found on our Foundation Training Year Supervisor Induction pages.
The FTY will see some significant changes in 2025-26, as we move towards full implementation of the GPhC 2021 Initial Education and Training of Pharmacist standards. From the 2025-26 FTY, most trainee pharmacists will follow the GPhC full learning outcomes to prescriber on registration pathway and some will follow the GPhC interim learning outcomes to non-prescriber on registration pathway. All trainee pharmacists will require a Designated Supervisor (DS) and those on the full learning outcomes to prescriber pathway will also require Designated Prescribing Practitioner (DPP) supervision. To support supervisors in their role, we have designed a new FTY supervisor induction session which will be part of the mandatory DS / DPP training for 2025-26.
On successful completion of the FTY Supervisor Declaration supervisors will be provided with details of how to book onto a FTY Supervisor Induction.
Following pilots in March 2025, induction events will run from May 2025 throughout the training year. NES plan to deliver 18 induction sessions by end of November 2025. There will be a mixture of daytime and evening sessions. After an initial roll out between May and November 2025, it is anticipated further sessions will be scheduled on a rolling basis to capture new supervisors.
The induction focus will be video examples of supervised learning events (SLEs) demonstrating trainee pharmacists being assessed against specific IE&T learning outcomes supplemented by peer group activities. There will be opportunities to become familiar with updated FTY SLE tools, and encouragement to use SLE descriptors to develop a standardised assessment approach. Supervisors will have the opportunity to compare and reflect on their expectations of level of practice with peers as a means to promote fair and equitable assessment of trainee pharmacists.
After the induction session participants will be signposted to a list of our upcoming FTY supervisor support sessions to meet their commitment to continuing professional development in the DS and DPP roles. They will receive details of key dates and relevant Turas Learn pages for the training year. There will also be an opportunity for supervisors to join a longitudinal peer support group.
FTY support sessions will include a session exploring the new Turas training portfolio, preparation for appraisal points, dealing with challenging situations, information about the GPhC common registration assessment and increasing familiarity with some of the assessment tools such as completing direct observation of procedure skills (DOPS). Educational supervisor SLE workshops and peer review sessions will continue to be available throughout the training year.
The NES FTY assessment strategy details the FTY learning outcomes and some suggested examples of how these can be assessed in practice.
It may also be useful for some supervisors to see how the prescribing related learning outcomes in the FTY map over to the RPS Prescribers Competency Framework and how the individual SLE tools can be most effectively used for assessment. The NES FTY prescribing outcome SLE guidance can help supervisors to feel confident about how best to assess the prescribing related LOs for trainee pharmacists.
NES have developed structured supervised learning event tools to enable trainee pharmacists, supervisors and collaborators to be clear on the required standard. Samples of the supervised learning event tools can be found below to provide some guidance in advance of the training year. Please note these are currently in development as part of the design of the online portfolio and may be subject to some changes.
A reminder of the type of SLEs and what they can be best used to evidence
SLE Type | Used to evidence | Mandatory/optional |
---|---|---|
Direct Observation of Procedural Skills (DOPS) | Physical assessment skills | Mandatory |
Min-Clinical Examination (mini-CEX) | Consultation and shared decision-making skills | Mandatory |
Case-based Discussions (CbD) | Appropriate prescribing choices, clinical and non-clinical management | Mandatory |
Case presentation | History taking/data gathering, clinical reasoning and appropriate safety netting/monitoring/follow up | Mandatory |
Acute care assessment tool (ACAT) | Workload prioritisation and decision making under pressure | Optional |
These documents can be found below:
DOPS form
Mini-CEX form
Case based discussion
Case presentation form
ACAT form
In addition the following tools may be useful to support the trainee pharmacist and to help develop supervisor and collaborator understanding of the required behaviours and skills that are required for trainee pharmacists to become prescriber ready.
The clinical reasoning cycle may help in structuring an approach to completing supervised learning events. Doing so helps ensure relevant data is captured, discussions on potential issues and goals of treatment and actions that were taken occur and outlined in the form itself. Reflecting on the process through SLE discussions and encouraging capturing trainee pharmacist self-reflection as part of the SLE form should also encourage reflection on their current capabilities, limitations of practice and how to address these throughout the training year.
Clinical Reasoning Cycle
Consultation skills modules have been designed for pharmacists and technicians to develop basic skills and could be used as a useful reference point to support trainee pharmacists development and supervisor feedback. Trainee pharmacists are encouraged to split the modules up throughout the training year.
As part of final sign off for Foundation Training Year trainee pharmacists must demonstrate competence against the core procedures (temperature, automated blood pressure, pulse, respiratory rate and oxygen saturation levels).
The core procedure checklists below can be used to help supervisors to assess this competence.
Each core procedure form is in the same format with a drop down box to allow you to select the skill being assessed.
A sample of the form can be found below.
Core Procedure Form
Once a trainee pharmacist is deemed as competent in a particular core procedure, a direct observation of procedural skills (DOPs) form can be used to gather evidence of how the use of a physical assessment skill in a consultation informed the trainee pharmacist’s decision making.
An example of a DOPs form for an automated blood pressure can be found below.
DOPS Automated BP Template