
Welcome to the Royal College of Pharmacy
We’ve changed. You may know us as the Royal Pharmaceutical Society — on 15 April 2026, we became the Royal College of Pharmacy.


We are the Royal College of Pharmacy, the professional leadership body for pharmacists and pharmaceutical scientists. We exist to advance the safe and effective use of medicines, drive excellence in patient care and support pharmacists to deliver the highest standards of practice.
As the third largest workforce in healthcare, pharmacy plays a vital role in the health system, and as experts in medicines, pharmacists and their teams are central to patient care and public health. Our mission is to put pharmacy at the forefront of patient care, advancing the safe and effective use of medicines to the benefit of patients and the public.





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News
The latest news and updates from Royal College of Pharmacy
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Pharmacists must not be criminalised over puberty blocking hormones, warns RPS
This news story was published when the organisation was the Royal Pharmaceutical Society. In light of confirmation by Judicial Review that the emergency prohibition order for puberty blocking hormones remains valid, the Royal Pharmaceutical Society is concerned about the potential criminalisation of pharmacists who dispense these medicines and calling for patients to have timely access to specialist care pathways for support. The emergency prohibition makes it a criminal offence to supply puberty blockers outside the terms of the order. RPS is concerned this may inadvertently result in pharmacists declining to supply these medicines at all for fear of prosecution, which will negatively affect patient care. For example, these medicines can still be legitimately supplied to under 18s for very early onset of puberty (usually caused by another condition), to people under 18 with gender dysphoria already in treatment, and to people aged 18 and over. The order also criminalises pharmacists who unknowingly break the law through no fault of their own, such as when a patient misleads the pharmacist about their clinical condition, age or identity. The speed at which the ban was issued could also mean there are some pharmacists who are not yet aware of it and inadvertently dispense a prescription. Normally a ban has an advance ‘run-in’ period so healthcare professionals can be made aware of it and understand their responsibilities. The absence of advance notice means a prosecution could take place which would not be in the public interest. RPS has raised concerns about the potential criminalisation of pharmacists with the Department of Health and Social Care on behalf of the profession and civil servants recognise this risk. We urge the Government to consider a solution which protects patients but doesn’t unfairly criminalise pharmacists. It is helpful that the Judicial Review has shone a spotlight on the need to support children and young people who were prescribed puberty blockers prior to the banning order and are now struggling to access UK registered health services. It is challenging for pharmacy teams to support children and young people with gender incongruence and gender dysphoria due to the lack of comprehensive regulatory or clinical guidelines. This means there is often no easily accessible referral pathway* to link people to the treatment and care they need, including mental health support. In line with the Cass Review, RPS is calling on the Government to provide timely access to specialist care pathways to support patients who are awaiting consultation, or who cannot access medicines they were previously taking, so they receive the necessary care. Read our full position statement. *In England, Wales and Scotland, current NHS advice is for pharmacists to refer patients back to their GP. In England, GPs can then refer patients, if appropriate, to the National Referral Support Service for CYP Gender Services, where patients should be able to access to mental health support if they wish while waiting to be seen by the specialist service. In Scotland, patients can be referred to gender identity services by their GP. These services are located within NHS Greater Glasgow & Clyde, NHS Lothian, NHS Highland and NHS Grampian. Further information and contact details can be found on the National Gender Identity Clinical Network for Scotland website. In Wales, GPs can refer patients to the Welsh Gender service. These referral services all have extensive waiting lists. Read more RCPharm news stories.
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Call for evidence on facilitated self-selection of P medicines
This news story was published when the organisation was the Royal Pharmaceutical Society. We've published a call for evidence on the facilitated self-selection of P medicines following changes made by the regulator, the General Pharmaceutical Council (GPhC), enabling more pharmacies to adopt this practice. The call for evidence is open for eight weeks from 12 July – 06 September 2024 and is the outcome of the national Pharmacy Boards meeting in June, which discussed the current RPS position that "Pharmacy medicines must not be accessible to the public by self-selection", as stated in our guide Medicines, Ethics and Practice. The Call asks for submission of evidence of the benefits and harms of a facilitated self-selection model for P medicines in relation to patient care, and any evidence gaps with an explanation of areas where further research is required. RPS CEO Paul Bennett said: "Following changes brought by the GPhC focusing on an outcomes approach to standards, they have confirmed they no longer prohibit facilitated self-selection of P medicines. As a result, there are pharmacies that are now adopting a more flexible interpretation to providing this group of medicines. "The GPhC have stated that sale and supply of a P medicine must still take place in a registered pharmacy premises under the supervision of a pharmacist, and that appropritae measures should be in place to ensure that supervision continues. "The evidence base gathered through this exercise will inform a report by RPS Science and Research to enable us to consider our current position. As the professional body, we are committed to patient safety and the safe development of innovative practice to meet the needs of patients now and for the future. Please share the call for evidence with your networks." To inform the review, we want to hear from a wide range of pharmacists and pharmacy team members, patient representative bodies, employers, academics, think tanks, pharmacy representative bodies, regulators and other stakeholders and researchers. Please read and respond to the call for evidence.