✨ Justice Resignation and Medicines Notice
NEW ZEALAND GAZETTE, No. 72 — 18 AUGUST 2016
Justice of the Peace Resignation
It is noted for information that
William Bruce McConnell, of Waiuku
has resigned his appointment as a Justice of the Peace for New Zealand.
Dated at Wellington this 16th day of August 2016.
ANDREW BRIDGMAN, Secretary for Justice.
2016-go4759
General Section
Medicines (Designated Prescriber – Registered Nurses) Notice 2016
Pursuant to sections 105 and 105B of the Medicines Act 1981 and the Medicines (Designated Prescriber – Registered Nurses) Regulations 2016, the Nursing Council of New Zealand (“Council”) gives the following notice.
Notice
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Title and commencement—This notice is the Medicines (Designated Prescriber – Registered Nurses) Notice 2016 and comes into force on 20 September 2016.
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Purpose—The Schedule to this notice sets out the requirements that the Council has determined must be met by registered nurses practising in collaborative primary health and specialty teams who wish to prescribe specified prescription medicine (A1). These requirements are imposed under Regulation 5 of the Medicines (Designated Prescriber – Registered Nurses) Regulations 2016. The Schedule also sets out the requirements for registered nurses practising in diabetes health who wish to prescribe specified prescription medicines (A2). The requirements for prescribing in diabetes health will commence on 30 November 2016 and will be revoked on 30 November 2017. After this time all registered nurses will be required to meet the requirements in (A1) for prescribing.
Schedule
A. Requirements for Prescribing (Regulation 6)
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The Council requirements for education and training that registered nurses must complete before commencing to prescribe for the first time in primary health and specialty teams are as follows:
a. A minimum of three years’ full-time equivalent practice in the area they intend to prescribe with at least one year of the total practice in New Zealand or a similar healthcare context;
b. the completion of a Council-approved postgraduate diploma in registered nurse prescribing for long-term and common conditions or equivalent as assessed by the Council;
c. completion of a practicum with an authorised prescriber, which demonstrates knowledge to safely prescribe specified prescription medicines and knowledge of the regulatory framework for prescribing; and
d. a satisfactory assessment of the competencies for nurse prescribers completed by an authorised prescriber.
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The Council requirements for education and training that registered nurses must undertake before commencing to prescribe for the first time in diabetes health are as follows:
a. The completion of two Level 8 papers or equivalent, as assessed by the Council. The papers must include the following content: pathophysiology, clinical assessment and decision making, and pharmacology;
b. demonstration of a clear understanding of diabetes disease processes at Level 8, or equivalent, as determined by the Council; and
c. completion of a six- to 12-week practicum with the authorised prescriber supervising the prescribing, which demonstrates knowledge to safely prescribe all specified diabetes medicines and knowledge of the regulatory framework for prescribing.
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✨ LLM interpretation of page content
⚖️ Justice of the Peace Resignation
⚖️ Justice & Law Enforcement16 August 2016
Resignation, Justice of the Peace, Waiuku
- William Bruce McConnell, Resigned as Justice of the Peace
- ANDREW BRIDGMAN, Secretary for Justice
🏥 Medicines (Designated Prescriber – Registered Nurses) Notice 2016
🏥 Health & Social WelfareMedicines Act, Registered Nurses, Prescribing, Education, Training
- Nursing Council of New Zealand
NZ Gazette 2016, No 72