Case Law[2023] ZAGPPHC 666South Africa
IPA Foundation (NPC) v South African Pharmacy Council and Others (7452/2022) [2023] ZAGPPHC 666 (14 August 2023)
High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Pretoria)
14 August 2023
Headnotes
in Bato Star Fishing (Pty) v Minister of Environmental Affairs and Tourism[5] that whenever administrative action as defined in PAJA is taken on review, as it is in casu, PAJA applies.
Judgment
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## IPA Foundation (NPC) v South African Pharmacy Council and Others (7452/2022) [2023] ZAGPPHC 666 (14 August 2023)
IPA Foundation (NPC) v South African Pharmacy Council and Others (7452/2022) [2023] ZAGPPHC 666 (14 August 2023)
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sino date 14 August 2023
REPUBLIC OF SOUTH AFRICA
IN THE HIGH COURT OF
SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG DIVISION,
PRETORIA
CASE NO: 7452/2022
(1)
REPORTABLE: YES/NO
(2)
OF INTEREST TO OTHER JUDGES: NO
(3)
REVISED: NO
Date: 14
August 2023
E van der Schyff
In
the matter between:
THE
IPA FOUNDATION (NPC)
APPLICANT
and
SOUTH
AFRICAN PHARMACY COUNCIL
FIRST RESPONDENT
MINISTER
OF HEALTH
SECOND RESPONDENT
DIRECTOR-GENERAL:
NATIONAL DEPARTMENT
OF
HEALTH
THIRD RESPONDENT
JUDGMENT
Van
der Schyff J
Introduction
[1]
This is a
review application launched by the applicant (IPA) in terms of ss 3
and 6(2) of the Promotion of Administrative Justice
Act 3 of 2000
(PAJA), and 'in addition, or in the alternative', on grounds of
legality. The South African Pharmacy Council (the
SAPC or the
Council) is the first respondent. IPA challenges the SAPC's decision
to implement,
[1]
and the
subsequent implementation of Pharmacist-Initiated Management of
Antiretroviral Treatment (PIMART).
[2]
The question as to what PIMART entails is dealt with herein below.
[2]
IPA claims that the SAPC failed to provide interested parties with
adequate
opportunity to give comments or make representations before
PIMART was implemented. IPA further contends that by adopting PIMART,
the SAPC unjustifiably and irrationally extended the scope of
practice of a pharmacist to encroach on the domain of medical
practitioners,
that the extension is irreconcilable and in conflict
with existing legislation, and not authorised by the empowering
legislative
framework. IPA also believes that the SAPC misled the
third respondent when it informed it that there was extensive
consultation
with stakeholders in developing PIMART. This, IPA holds,
led the third respondent to approve issuing s 22A(15)-permits for
PIMART
services to be rendered.
[3]
The SAPC, in turn, seeks that the application be dismissed. The SAPC
submits
that the decision to introduce PIMART to pharmacists' scope
of practice is rational and reasonable, particularly if regard is had
to the narrow scope thereof. Pharmacy-provided primary healthcare is
a well-known and functional concept in South Africa and manifests
in
pharmacist-initiated therapy (PIT), and primary care drug therapy
(PCDT). PIT and PCDT are catered for in the existing legislative
framework. The accreditation and standard of the professional
training that pharmacists require to enable them to provide PIT and
PCDT, respectively, are regulated by the Pharmacy Act 53 of 1974 (the
Pharmacy Act). To
provide PCDT, pharmacists must be authorised to
prescribe schedule 4 medication, and the provisions of s 22A(15) of
the Medicines
and Related Substances Control Act 101 of 1965 (the
Medicines Act) are utilised for obtaining s 22A(15)-permits. These s
22A(15)-permits
authorise, suitably qualified pharmacists to
prescribe specific medication for prescribed conditions, something
they would not
otherwise have been able to do.
[4]
Pharmacists qualified to provide PCDT can, amongst others, provide
'Occupational
Post Exposure HIV Prophylaxis for Health Care Workers'.
PIT services already provided by pharmacists include HIV testing,
emergency
post-coital contraception, pregnancy testing, urine test
analysis, and patient wellness regarding sexual health. PIT and PCDT
already
empower pharmacists to consult, diagnose and manage patients.
[5]
The SAPC contends that IPA is wrong in perceiving PIMART to
constitute
an encroachment on the domain of medical practitioners,
and states that it is a measure within the ambit and control of the
SAPC
that falls under its mandate. The SAPC's case is that the
introduction of PIMART is not an extension of the scope of
pharmacists'
practice by introducing a novel facet to it, but the
widening thereof by the incorporation of a specific category of PIT
and PCDT
in a system that already provides for PIT and PCDT services
for prescribed conditions. I understand PIMART to constitute a
specialised
category of PIT and PCDT that requires additional
training.
[6]
IPA seeks no relief against the second and third respondents, who
were
only cited insofar as they might have or claim to have a direct
or substantial interest in the matter. Despite being properly served
with the application, these respondents did not enter the fray.
PAJA
or legality review
[7]
IPA states
in its founding affidavit that the impugned decisions and actions it
regards as reviewable under PAJA 'are also reviewable
on the basis of
legality and the rule of law' and the application similarly
constitutes, 'in addition and/or alternative to a PAJA
review, a
legality review.' Despite this cautionary approach followed by IPA, I
do not perceive the grounds of review IPA relies
on to extend to
review grounds outside of the PAJA-parameter.
[3]
IPA's reference to the SAPC's decisions and actions being
ultra
vires
is
nothing more than expressing the view that the SAPC was not
authorised by the 'empowering provision' to take the decisions and
actions it took and that the introduction of PIMART is not rationally
connected to the purpose of the empowering provision. IPA,
in
essence, contends that the SAPC misconstrued the power conferred on
it by the empowering legislation (the
Pharmacy Act) as
enabling it to
extend the scope of pharmacists' practice unilaterally. Thus, It is
unnecessary to engage in an in-depth discussion
as to whether a party
can simultaneously rely on PAJA and the principle of legality.
[4]
It suffices to state that it was authoritatively held in
Bato
Star Fishing (Pty) v Minister of Environmental Affairs and Tourism
[5]
that whenever administrative action as defined in PAJA is taken on
review, as it is
in
casu
,
PAJA applies.
[8]
To determine whether the prescripts of
s 3
of PAJA are met, or
whether there is merit in the grounds of review listed, it is
necessary to have regard to the background and
context within which
the PIMART initiative was developed, to grasp what PIMART entails and
to understand the legislative landscape.
Background
and context
[9]
The World
Health Organisation (WHO), in its 'Consolidated Guidelines on the Use
of Antiretroviral Drugs for Treating and Preventing
HIV Infection;
Recommendations for a Public Health Approach',
[6]
recommends that all people living with HIV must be provided with
antiretroviral treatment (ART) to bring the globe one step closer
to
achieving universal access to HIV treatment and care, in striving to
end AIDS as a public health threat. According to UNAIDS,
twenty years
of
evidence demonstrates that HIV treatment is highly effective in
reducing the transmission of HIV.
[7]
UNAIDS informs that people living with HIV on antiretroviral therapy
who have an undetectable level of HIV in their blood have
no risk of
transmitting HIV sexually.
[10]
To address
the challenge of delivering large-scale, sustainable, and effective
ART programs in a resource-restrained context amidst
the rising HIV
infection rate, the Department of Health requested the SAPC to
consider and implement an intervention that would
ensure that
patients have increased access to antiretroviral medicines for the
purposes of providing Pre-Exposure Prophylaxis
[8]
('PrEP') and Post-Exposure Prophylaxis
[9]
('PEP').
[11]
This shift
from physician-initiated and managed ART commenced with the
introduction of 'Nurse Initiated Management of Antiretroviral
Therapy', NIMART. It is apposite to state that NIMART, in its fullest
sense, involves nurse-initiation of patients onto ART,
re-prescription
for patients stable on ART, and appropriate referral
to physicians as needed.
[10]
This development accords with global recommendations and guidelines
on task-shifting as a method of strengthening and expanding
the
health workforce to rapidly increase access to, amongst others, HIV
health services promoted by the WHO.
[11]
The WHO identified the potential for task-shifting that involves
'other cadres that do not traditionally have a clinical function,
for
example, pharmacists …'. The issue of pharmacists prescribing
PrEP and PEP is a burning issue internationally, with
pharmacists
being authorised to independently prescribe PrEP and PEP to prevent
HIV in, at least, Colorado, Oregon and California,
[12]
and Brazil, with a collaborative approach followed in many other
jurisdictions.
[13]
[12]
The SAPC, after investigating different options, requested the
Director-General on 15 August
2018 to consider issuing
s
22A(15)
-permits to pharmacists who have completed a supplementary
training qualification for PrEP and PEP. The PIMART qualification was
subsequently developed in collaboration with the Southern African HIV
Clinicians Society and the School of Pharmacy of the North-West
University. The SAPC recommended that permits be issued only to
pharmacists who successfully completed the PIMART course accredited
by it.
[13]
It is relevant to note that s 22A(15) of the Medicines Act (hereafter
only referred to
as s 22A(15)) is being used to issue permits to
enable primary care drug therapy (PCDT). Permits issued in terms of s
22A(15) in
the PCDT context are accompanied by a list of medicines
and conditions in line with the Standard Treatment Guidelines and the
Essential
Medicines List published by the Department of Health.
[14]
On 22 March 2021, the SAPC published Board Notice 17 of 2021 for
public comment and stakeholder
engagement regarding the adoption of
PIMART. The schedule attached to the notice sets out – (i) the
scope of practice of
a pharmacist who provides PIMART services; (ii)
competency standards for a pharmacist who provides PIMART services;
and (iii) criteria
for accreditation/approval by the SAPC of a
curriculum leading to the awarding of a PIMART course. Interested
parties and stakeholders
were invited to submit, within 60 days of
publication of the notice, substantiated comments on or
representation regarding PIMART.
The prescribed notice period ended
on 21 May 2021. The SAPC conducted meetings during June 2021 and
considered the comments received.
[15]
A meeting was subsequently held with the Director-General: Health on
30 June 2021. The
minutes reflect that the Director-General was,
inter alia
, informed that the 'SAPC has approved for
implementation, the scope of practice, competency standards and
criteria for accreditation
of providers who wish to train pharmacists
to offer Pharmacists Initiated Management of Antiretroviral Therapy
(PIMART) services
after extensive consultation with the
stakeholders'.
[16]
On 12 August 2021, the Director-General approved issuing s
22A(15)-permits to pharmacists
who are duly qualified to provide
PIMART services. On 13 August 2021, Board Notice 101 of 2021 was
published for implementation
of the said scope of practice of
pharmacists who proved PIMART services, competency standards, and
accreditation criteria.
[17]
On 8 September 2021, after the publication of Board Notice 101 of
2021, through which PIMART
was implemented, IPA submitted its
comments and objections regarding PIMART to the SAPC. IPA concedes
that the comments were submitted
far outside the prescribed 60-day
notice period provided in Board Notice 17 of 2021 and after the
publication of the board notice
through which PIMART was implemented.
IPA claims that Board Notice 17 of 2021, which invited comments and
presentations, was published
when its members were addressing and
struggling to overcome another wave of the Covid-19 pandemic.
[18]
On 27 September 2021, the Forum of Statutory Health Professional
Councils ('the Forum')
held a meeting to discuss, amongst others, the
implication of Board Notice 101 of 2021. At this meeting, comments
were made, and
concerns were raised by the Health Professions Council
of South Africa, the South African Nursing Council, and the Allied
Health
Professions Council of South Africa. The SAPC made a
presentation, responded to the comments, and endeavoured to address
the concerns.
The concerned stakeholders agreed that there would be
further engagement on Board Notice 101 of 2021 through a subcommittee
of
the Forum. No subsequent resolutions have been taken by the Forum
in this regard.
What
does PIMART entail?
[19]
In considering this review application, it is necessary to understand
what the published
scope of practice of a pharmacist who provides
PIMART, entails.
[20]
In addition to the acts and services which form part of the scope of
practice of the pharmacist
as prescribed in terms of regulations 3
and 4 of the 'Regulations relating to the practice of pharmacy', the
SAPC determined that
a pharmacist who has completed the PIMART
supplementary training, and was issued a s 22A(15)-permit:
'must be allowed to
perform consultations with patients at a pharmacy or in an approved
primary health care setting, which includes:
(a)
history
taking, performing of screening and confirmatory tests, ordering,
conducting and interpretation of diagnostic and laboratory
tests in
line with NDoH guidelines (for diagnosis, clinical staging and
assessment of an HIV infected patient or those at high
risk of
contracting HIV);
(b)
assess and
manage the HIV-infected patients or those at high risk of contracting
HIV who require Pre-Exposure Prophylaxis (PrEP)
and Post-Exposure
Prophylaxis (PEP), who are not pregnant or under 15 years of age;
(c)
decision on
safe and appropriate therapy;
(d)
initiate
antiretroviral treatment limited to PrEP, PEP and 1st line
Antiretroviral Therapy (ART) plus initiation of TB-Preventative
Therapy (TPT) in line with NDoH guidelines;
(e)
adjustment of
ART (where necessary) which has been prescribed previously;
(f)
monitoring of
the outcomes of therapy;
(g)
referral to
another health care provider where necessary, e.g., discordant
results; and
(h)
confidential
and adequate record keeping.'
[21]
The
services provided in terms of the PIMART initiative can be separated
into two broad categories. The first is preventative measures,
and
this encompasses providing PrEp and PEP.
[14]
The second constitutes a treatment regime that exceeds
preventative measures, namely initiating ART and TPT, in line with
the National Department of Health guidelines. Although the SAPC
claims, and counsel for the SAPC emphasised, that PIMART provides
for
first-line treatment only in respect of 'uncomplicated
non-immunocompromised-HIV-positive persons', this limitation is not
included in the gazetted scope of practice of a pharmacist providing
PIMART services. The scope of practice does, however, provide
for
referral to other health care providers, amongst others, when
discordant results are obtained.
The
legislative landscape
[22]
Pharmacists and medical doctors operate in distinct and separate
professional domains.
The respective professions' scopes of practice
are determined by regulations promulgated in terms of the Health
Professions Act
56 of 1974 (the Health Professions Act) and the
Pharmacy Act, respectively
.
[23]
The
boundaries of the respective domains are closely guarded, and some
tension exists between the groups. The tension between pharmacists
and doctors in South Africa has been the theme of a study with the
results published in 1998.
[15]
Gilbert's study reveals a 'deep ongoing sense of competition'. The
issue is not new and is also not only limited to South Africa.
Gilbert refers to Pascall and Robinson,
[16]
who argue that 'boundary disputes between occupations and competition
over work roles are an inevitable component of a complex
health care
system with an elaborate division of labour and changing social and
technological environment.' Gilbert also refers
to Eaton and
Webb,
[17]
who referred to the
extended role of community pharmacy as 'boundary encroachment',
claiming that it is an attempt to extend the
boundaries of pharmacy
practice into the territory of the medical profession, the boundary,
in this case, being between prescribing
and dispensing.
[24]
IPA contends that the implementation of PIMART and the concomitant
extension (widening)
of the scope of practice of pharmacists that it
brings about is not supported by the existing legislative framework,
and claims
that it
is beyond a pharmacist's scope
of practice to diagnose and treat diseases. The SAPC, in turn, claims
that the decision to implement
PIMART and its implementation fall
within its statutory mandate.
[25]
The
different healthcare cadres jealously guard the boundaries of their
respective scopes of practice. This, it must be pointed
out, despite
the WHO's call for a collaborative approach to primary health care
issues, and the embracing of task-shifting.
[18]
That IPA's objection to PIMART seems to be rooted, partially at
least, in this professional tension, is evinced by its fear that
the
decision to develop and implement PIMART might 'open the floodgates'
and is a 'negative precedent setting occurrence relevant
to the
provision of medicine' that may 'inevitably pave the way for
pharmacists to ultimately treat and prescribe other schedule
4 drugs
over the counter in respect of acute illnesses.' However, IPA's
exposition of the existing legislative landscape is one-dimensional
and incomplete. It does not refer to the exceptions provided in the
respective statutes and regulations. The SAPC, on the other
hand,
although referring to the SAPHRA Guidelines, refrains from dealing
with the policy requirement to 'closely liaise' with the
HPCSA as it
features in the SAPHRA Guidelines- an aspect more fully discussed
below. It is, therefore, appropriate to commence
this discussion by
emphasising that the respective scopes of practice of healthcare
professions in South Africa, are not, as IPA
claims, entirely
exclusive to the identified professions.
[26]
The applicable legal framework comprises the National Drug Police,
The Medicines Act, the
Health Professions Act and Regulations, the
Pharmacy Act and
Regulations, The National Health Act, and the SAPHRA
Guidelines relating to the scheduling of substances.
[27]
The
National Drug Policy envisages development consistent with the World
Health Organisation's promotion of task-shifting to advance
access to
medicine and improve efficiency in health systems.
[19]
Although the policy document does not signal the broad-based
authorisation of prescribing rights for pharmacists, it indicates
a
preference for adopting competency-based measures as criteria for
access to expanded prescribing privileges by holding –
'At
primary level
prescribing
will be competency, not occupation, based.'
[20]
Section 22A(15) of the Medicines Act is the legal avenue through
which pharmacists can obtain permits to prescribe schedule 3-5
substances.
[28]
The
Medicines and Related Substances Act of 1965
prescribes that
pharmacists may only sell schedule 1 and 2 substances without a
prescription, schedule 3 substances in certain
prescribed
circumstances, and schedule 4, 5, and 7 substances only on
prescription by a medical practitioner. Section 22A of the
Act,
however, allows for the fluidity of scopes of practice between the
healthcare professions in that s 22A(14)(b)
[21]
allows healthcare professionals, other than medical practitioners, to
be identified and approved as authorised prescribers. Section
22A(15)
recognises that certain healthcare
professionals
may need to prescribe and dispense certain medicines that may not be
contained in ss 22A(2) to 22A(5). Section 22C(1)(a)
allows for
healthcare professionals other than pharmacists to dispense by
issuing a licence to compound and dispense medicines
on prescribed
conditions. The relevance of s 22A(15) and its use within PIT, and
subsequently PIMART, is dealt with below. IPA
failed to consider, or
refer to, the relevance of s 22A(15) when it bluntly stated that
pharmacists may only sell schedule 1 and
2 substances without a
prescription.
[29]
Cognisance
should also be taken of the SAHPRA Guideline'
Scheduling
of Substances for Prescribing by Authorised Prescribers other than
Medical Practitioners or Dentists',
[22]
(the SAPHRA Guideline / the guideline). SAPHRA is the South African
Health Products Regulatory Authority. Both parties referred
to the
policy in passing, but neither dealt with its content in detail. The
purpose of the guideline, as stated in the guideline
reads as
follows:
'
This
document provides guidance on the process for amending the Schedules
to the Medicines and Related Substances Act, 1965 (Act
101 of 1965)
to allow prescription rights to authorised health professionals,
other than medical practitioners or dentists, in
accordance with the
provisions of section 22A of the Act. It also covers the process for
[providing] input to the Director-General
of Health in relation to
applications for exceptional access by means of section 22A(15)
permits.'
[30]
Point 3.1 of the SAPHRA Guidelines prescribes that applications for
amending the Schedules
in order to designate specific substances to
be prescribed by selected health professionals in accordance with s
22A must provide
at least the following information:
i.
Clear identification of the category of holders of registration. The
category may be
defined as having gained registration, e.g., after
having completed a designated supplementary course or post-graduate
qualification.
The course or qualification must be accredited for
this purpose by the statutory council concerned, as enabled in the
applicable
legislation. The provider of such a course or
qualification must also be accredited by the statutory council
concerned as provided
for in the applicable legislation;
ii.
A clear explanation of the competencies held by such holders of
registration, indicating
the clinical conditions which would be
appropriate to be diagnosed and managed by such persons;
iii.
A clear explanation, with justification, of the means of ensuring the
competence
of such holders of registration to manage the clinical
conditions listed. This would entail a detailed description of the
curriculum,
the nature of the practical clinical training provided,
as well as the approach to assessment of clinical competence;
iv.
A clear and justified listing of the substances to be included in
Schedules 1 to 6
(as appropriate), linked to the list of conditions
to be managed by such holders of registration. While the most current
PHC STG/EML
may be used as a reference in determining this list,
consideration may need to be given to the inclusion of additional
examples
of pharmacological classes that are of comparable efficacy
and safety, where the STG/EML lists only one example from that class.
[31]
Paragraph 3.2 of the SAPHRA Guideline requires:
'In addition to the
information listed above, the applicant should provide evidence of
close liaison with the Health Professions
Council of South Africa
regarding the design of any training programme which deals with
diagnosis and prescribing. Where the applicant
is a particular
Professional Board of the Health Professions Council of South Africa,
input should be sought from the Professional
Board most appropriate
to the area of clinical practice as well as the Council itself.'
[32]
The requirement listed in points 3.1 and 3.2 of the SAPHRA Guideline
applies
mutatis mutandis
to any application submitted to the
Director-General in terms of s 22A(15) on which the input of the
South African Health Products
Regulatory Authority is requested.
[33]
These guidelines are relevant because it is
indicative of the fact that persons, other than medical practitioners
and dentists may
be authorised to prescribe scheduled substances. I
am alive to the fact that it is stated in the guideline that while
the Director-General
'can look to the South African Health Products
Regulatory Authority' for advice' when an application to issue a s
22A(15)-permit
is considered, '[s]uch input should not in any way
restrict the ability of the Director-General to make individual
determinations
for specific circumstances.' The SAPHRA guideline that
the input of the HPCSA needs to be obtained when training courses are
developed
is thus not a legislative obligation when s 22A(15)-permits
are applied for.
[34]
Section 52 of the Health Professions Act 56 of 1974 (the Health
Professions Act) provides
for medical practitioners, dentists, or
other persons registered in terms of the Act, to compound or dispense
medicine on the authority
and subject to the conditions of a licence
granted by the Director-General. This section withered the boundaries
of the scopes
of practice of medical practitioners and pharmacists
and allowed licensed medical practitioners and dentists to conduct
actions
previously reserved for pharmacists.
[35]
Regulation
2 of the 'Health Profession Council of South Africa: Regulations
defining the scope of the profession of medicine
[23]
',
[24]
lists the acts which are deemed to be acts pertaining to the medical
profession. These include, amongst others, the physical and/or
clinical examination of any person, diagnosing a person's physical
health status, and advising such person on his or her physical
health
status. Regulation 3, however, provides that:
'The
provisions of regulation 2 shall not be construed as prohibiting –
(a)
any person registered under any legislation regulating health care
providers from
performing any act specified in that regulation in
accordance with the provisions of such legislation.'
[36]
Regulation 4 prescribes that any person who wishes to perform any of
the acts prescribed
in regulation 2 shall apply in the prescribed
manner to the board for registration as a medical practitioner.
Seeing that regulation
3, however, provides for persons registered
under any legislation regulating health care, to perform the acts
listed in regulation
2, such persons need not register as medical
practitioners, as is suggested by IPA. The SAPC points out that
nurses providing NIMART
were not required to register when NIMART was
implemented.
[37]
The
Pharmacy Act was
promulgated to provide for the establishment of the
SAPC and for its objects and general powers, to extend the control of
the SAPC
to the public sector, and to provide for pharmacy education
and training, requirements for registration, the practice of
pharmacy,
the ownership of pharmacies, the investigative and
disciplinary powers of the SAPC and matters connected therewith. The
SAPC is
pertinently empowered to prescribe the scope of practice
of
the various categories of persons
registered
in terms of the Pharmacy Act.
[25]
(My emphasis).
[38]
Section 35A
of the
Pharmacy Act determines
that the control of
pharmacy practice; the scope of practice of persons registered in
terms of the Act; the services or acts which
shall for purposes of
this Act be deemed to be services or acts specially pertaining to
pharmacists; and the conditions under which
those services may be
performed, shall be prescribed. The Act authorises the Minister to
make regulations, in consultation with
the SAPC, pertaining to,
amongst others, the practice of pharmacy. The Minister determines the
scope of practice of pharmacy, whilst
the SAPC is empowered to
prescribe the scope of practice
of the various categories of
persons
registered in terms of the Act. There is a nuanced
differentiation between the powers of the Minister and the powers of
the SAPC.
The scope of practice of the various categories of persons
registered in terms of the
Pharmacy Act, cannot
, as far as
pharmacists are concerned, extend the scope of practice of pharmacy,
or add to the 'acts specifically pertaining to
the profession of a
pharmacist', as determined by the Minister.
[39]
The
Minister of Health, in consultation with the SAPC, promulgated,
several sets of regulations. The most pertinent for current
purposes
is the 'Regulation relating to the practice of pharmacy'.
[26]
Regulation 3
lists the acts that are regarded as acts specially
pertaining to the profession of a pharmacist. The first of these is
'the provision
of pharmaceutical care by taking responsibility for
the patient's medicine related needs and being accountable for
meeting these
needs, which shall include but not be limited to the
following functions: … (e) the provision of pharmacist
initiated therapy…'
[40]
'Pharmacist initiated therapy' is defined in the regulations to mean:
'diagnosing a health
need, prescribing and supplying of medicine to meet the health need
of a patient or group of patients or, where
necessary, the referral
to another health care provider by a pharmacists who has received the
necessary authorisation from council'.
[41]
In terms of
regulation 18
, pharmacist initiated therapy (PIT) may be
provided in a community or institutional pharmacy.
Regulation 18(8)
further provides that 'primary drug care therapy' (PDCT) may be
provided at community and institutional pharmacies with prior
authorisation from the SAPC. PCDT is defined in the regulations to
mean:
'diagnosing a health
need, prescribing and supplying of medicine to meet the health needs
of a patient or group of patients or,
where necessary,
the
referral to another health care provider by a pharmacist who has
received the necessary authorisation from council.'
The
regulation also provides that HIV screening tests be provided in
these pharmacies to promote public health in accordance with
guidelines and standards determined by a competent authority.
[42]
Section 50 of the National Health Act establishes a forum known as
the Forum of Statutory
Health Professional Councils (the Forum). All
statutory health professional councils must be represented on the
Forum. The HPCSA
and SAPC are, amongst others, defined to be
statutory health professional councils. This Forum must, amongst
others, ensure communication
and liaison between the statutory health
professional councils upon matters affecting more than one of the
registered professions,
promote good practice in health services and
sharing of information between the statutory health professional
councils, and advise
the Minister and the individual statutory health
professional councils concerning,
inter alia
, the scopes of
practice of the registered professions.
Procedural
fairness
[43]
The question of whether the implementation of PIMART materially and
adversely affects any
person's rights or legitimate expectations is a
vexing question. IPA essentially contends that by allowing
pharmacists to provide
services currently only provided by medical
practitioners and nurses registered to provide NIMART services,
PIMART allows for an
additional competitor to enter the field. This,
IPA contends, materially and adversely affects the rights of its
members.
[44]
The SAPC's counsel submitted that if regard is had to the narrow
scope of PIMART as primarily
developed to
initiate
antiretroviral treatment limited to PrEP, PEP, and first-line
Antiretroviral Therapy (ART) plus initiation of TB-Preventative
Therapy (TPT)
therapy
in
line with National Department of Health guidelines, it is difficult
to see how PIMART adversely affect any rights or legitimate
expectations of medical practitioners.
Although the
implementation of PIMART can ostensibly give rise to some competition
between licensed pharmacists and family practitioners,
the rights of
family practitioners to provide such services cannot be said to be
curtailed or limited through the implementation
of the initiative.
[45]
PIMART is an initiative presenting members of the public with a
choice of whether they
want to approach a pharmacist or general
practitioner for the limited services provided by a pharmacist who
has been issued a s
22A(15)-permit to provide PIMART services.
Competition,
per se
, does not limit or curtail the rights of
medical practitioners to continue providing the services they
currently provide. Even
if the assumed competition is regarded to
affect family practitioner's rights adversely, the alleged adverse
effect it holds for
medical practitioners has to be considered
against the need to expand primary health care services aimed at
preventing and treating
HIV, and the abovementioned development
foreseen in the National Drug Policy to advancing access to medicine
and improving efficiency
in health systems.
[46]
IPA identifies the general public as a second party affected by the
implementation of PIMART
and asserts
locus standi
in the
public interest in terms of s 38(d) of the Constitution. IPA is
correct in its view. PIMART was explicitly developed to
benefit the
general public by broadening access to PrEP, PEP, and first-line ART.
If PIMART does not sufficiently safeguard the
interests of the public
to safe and efficient health care, its implementation would adversely
affect the rights of the general
public to safe health care. It is
thus necessary to consider whether the administrative action was
procedurally fair.
[47]
The parties
agree that 'one of the enduring characteristics of procedural
fairness is its flexibility' and that '[t]he application
of
procedural fairness must be considered with regard to the facts and
circumstances of each case.'
[27]
Hoexter explained that:
[28]
'…
procedural fairness is a principle of good administration that
requires sensitive rather than heavy-handed application.
Context is
all-important: the content of fairness is not static but must be
tailored to the particular circumstances of each case.'
[48]
IPA's first challenge to the validity of the SAPC's decision to
implement, and the subsequent
implementation of PIMART, is based on
the ground of procedural fairness. This attack is launched on two
fronts. IPA contends that
the publication of Board Notice 17 of 2021,
through which interested parties were invited to submit comments or
representation
on (i) the scope of PIMART services; (ii) competency
standards for a pharmacist who provides PIMART; and (iii) criteria
for accreditation/
approval by the SAPC of a curriculum leading to
the awarding of a PIMART course, was:
i.
published at an inopportune time in that IPA members were preoccupied
with dealing
with the COVID-19 pandemic, and
ii.
only published in the Government Gazette, a publication that is not
generally read.
[49]
The SAPC published Board Notice 17 of 2021 wherein comments and
recommendations on PIMART
were invited, in the
Government Gazette
of 22 March 2021. It also published the notice on its website –
as it ordinarily does with all its board notices.
[50]
In answer to the IPA's challenge based on procedural fairness, the
SAPC contends that publication
in the Government Gazette was
sufficient. The SAPC emphasises that sight should not be lost of the
fact that the rules which the
SAPC creates, and by necessary
implication, the scope of practice of pharmacists, are mainly limited
to the pharmacy profession
it regulates. It can, therefore, not be
compared to public institutions that regularly facilitate public
participation to disseminate
information to a broader audience.
Public knowledge of its intention to allow pharmacists to provide
PIMART services in a circumscribed
context was enhanced through
publication on its website. Through its collaboration with the
Southern African HIV Clinicians Society,
whose members include
numerous medical doctors, the development of PIMART was given great
exposure.
[51]
The SAPC denies that the board notice was strategically published at
an inopportune time.
Comments were received from five groups to wit –
Clicks Retailers (Pty) Ltd, the Department of Health of the Western
Cape,
the Independent Community Pharmacy Association, the
Pharmaceutical Society of South Africa National Office, and S Buys
[Pharmacy]
Academy (Pty) Ltd.
[52]
It is common cause that by publishing Board Notice 17 of 2021, the
SAPC followed the statutory
prescript of
s 49(4)
of the
Pharmacy Act.
The
section prescribes that:
'The council shall, not
less than two months before any rule is made in terms of this Act,
cause the text of such rule to be published
in the
Gazette
together with a notice declaring the council's intention to make such
a rule and inviting interested persons to furnish the council
with
comments thereon or any representations they may wish to make in this
regard.'
[53]
Section 49(4) is intrinsically linked to
s 35A
of the
Pharmacy Act.
The
SAPC is empowered through
s 35A(b)
to make rules relating to: a
code of conduct for pharmacists and other persons registered in terms
of the Act, what constitutes
good pharmacy practice, and, the
services for which a pharmacist may levy a fee and guidelines for
levying such a fee or fees.
PIMART, in my view, does not fall into
this category since it does not fall in the category of 'rules'
referred to in s 35A(b).
Publication according to the prescript of s
49 to foster transparency and invite comments and recommendations
can, however, not
be faulted.
[54]
To comment on or make representations regarding the PIMART initiative
requires specified
profession-related knowledge that members of the
public do not readily possess. It would serve no purpose to require
publication
in general newspapers in this instance. I do not agree
with IPA that the nature and extent of the public interest in the
implementation
of PIMART required public participation to the extent
required when rights in minerals are applied for in terms of the
Mineral and Petroleum Resources Development Act 28 of 2002
.
Prospecting or mining activities inadvertently impact e.g.,
landowners due to the nature thereof, the same cannot be said of
PIMART.
[55]
Members of
the health professions' fraternity, on the other hand, should expect
notices to be published in the
Government
Gazette
because that is the required manner in which notices of import and
legal effect are published, a fact evinced by The
National Health Act
61 of 2003
prescribing publication of a diverse range of notices in
the
Gazette
.
[29]
[56]
As for the IPA's challenge to the timing of the publication, the SAPC
points out that the
IPA is a professional organisation and a distinct
legal entity from its members. Whilst individual members might have
been preoccupied
with the Covid pandemic, no mention is made of the
functionaries of the organisation and why they did not alert the
members to
the publication. IPA contends that 'it was published at a
time when interested parties simply could ill-afford moving or at
very
least dividing its attention away from the Covid-19 pandemic to
that of providing substantiated comments or representation pertaining
to the notice.' IPA does not identify in its founding affidavit any
party that is an interested party who did not know about the
publication, nor does it explain why it did not send a communication
to the SAPC explaining that it wants to comment and make
representations but needs more time to do so due to the impact of the
Covid-pandemic and the complex nature of the subject matter.
IPA does
not explain how the subsequent publication of Board Notice 101 of
2021 came to its attention.
[57]
I find nothing sinister in the timing of the publication of Board
Notice 17 of 2021, as
IPA seems to suggest. SAHC's participation in
the development, its endorsement of the initiative, the
communications sent to its
members, and the fact that pilot projects
were already conducted necessarily mean that this initiative could
not, even if the SAPC
wanted to, have been introduced in a
clandestine way. It is not something that was hidden in secrecy.
Against this background,
I find it improbable, and it is not alleged,
that none of IPA's members had timeous knowledge of the publication
of Board Notice
17 of 2021.
[58]
On a reading of Board Notice 17 of 2021, it is evident that the
nature and extent of PIMART
are adequately explained.
[59]
In light of the above, I am satisfied that the SAPC gave
adequate notice of its intention
to adopt PIMART, that the nature and
purpose of PIMART were adequately explained, and that the IPA and
other interested and affected
parties were provided with a reasonable
opportunity to comment or make representations. The administrative
action in question was
procedurally fair.
Substantive
grounds of review:
Section 6(2)
of PAJA
[60]
It is trite that a competent authority taking administrative action
must be authorised
to do so. An action will be invalid if there is no
authorisation for the action. In addition, the taking of a decision
must be
within the limits as provided for in the empowering statute.
The SAPC has only those powers conferred on it through applicable
statutes. There must be a rational connection between the information
that was before the SAPC and the decision taken. The decision
must
also be rationally connected to the purpose for which it was taken,
the purpose of the empowering provision, and the reasons
given for
it.
Section 6(2)
of PAJA, further, amongst others, prescribes that
the decision must not have been materially influenced by an error of
law, taken
for an ulterior purpose, in bad faith, arbitrarily or
capriciously, or because irrelevant considerations were taken into
account
and relevant considerations were not considered. The decision
must also not be otherwise unconstitutional or unlawful.
[61]
As stated above, the legal framework applicable to the matter at hand
determines the scope
of the SAPC's powers. IPA's contention that the
Medicines Act and the Health Professions Act disallow pharmacists
from prescribing
schedule 3, 4, and 5 medication does not consider
the exceptions provided for in the statutes, or in particular, the
option of
obtaining a s 22A(15)-permit.
[62]
The SAPC is empowered to prescribe the scope of practice of the
various categories of persons
registered in terms of the
Pharmacy
Act. This
power is only limited by the boundaries of the 'practice of
pharmacy', or the 'scope of practice of a pharmacist' as prescribed
by the Minister. The provision of pharmacist-initiated therapy, which
comprises the supply of medicine to meet the health needs
of a
patient without a prescription of a person authorised to prescribe
medicine, and PCDT, which in addition comprises diagnosing
a health
need, prescribing and supplying medicine by pharmacists who have
received the necessary authorisation from the SAPC, and
the promotion
of public health are, amongst others, services or acts already
regarded to be services or acts pertaining to the
scope of practice
of pharmacists. The development and implementation of PIMART, does
not expand the existing scope of practice
of pharmacists that
generically provides for PIT and PCDT. It introduced a specialised
category of PIT and PCDT focused on preventing
and treating HIV.
[63]
The decision to implement PIMART fell within the ambit of the SAPC's
power, and there was
no statutory obligation to consult with the
HPCSA, or the Forum prior to its implementation. Consultation with
the HPCSA and the
Forum may arguably have resulted in an outcome
supported by IPA, or an outcome that IPA would have regarded as a
'better outcome',
but that is not the test on review. The reviewing
court's view on what the best decision would have been is irrelevant.
The only
question is whether the decision was regular or irregular.
Where no statutorily imposed obligation to consult with the HPSCA or
the Forum exists, the failure to consult cannot be considered
irregular.
[64]
The SAPC,
as guardian of the standard and quality of services provided by
pharmacists is the guardian of the quality of training
and
supplementary training of pharmacists. The Minister, in consultation
with the SAPC, promulgated regulations relating to the
training and
supplementary training of pharmacists. By developing the PIMART
course, and the criteria for its accreditation, the
SAPC acted within
its mandate. In any event, the evidence indicates that the PIMART
course was developed by suitably qualified
experts in the field,
which experts include medical practitioners. IPA's concern that the
initiative was developed without the
input of medical professionals
is without merit. The contention that the decision to implement
PIMART was materially influenced
by an error of law,
[30]
insofar as this contention relates to the SAPC's perceived power to
implement PIMART, is thus without merit.
[65]
Having been properly mandated to implement PIMART, an initiative that
was developed and
implemented in an effort to promote public health,
and widen access to public health care as far as the prevention and
treatment
of HIV are concerned, can not be said to have resulted from
a decision where the decisionmaker took irrelevant considerations
into
account or failed to consider relevant considerations. The
evidence before this court indicates that the SAPC considered the
risks
associated with pharmacists initiating first-line ART and TPT,
and providing PrEP and PEP, and had regard to those risks when
considering
to approve the PIMART training course. The evidence of
Professor Van Wyk and Ms. Jankelowitz supports a finding that the
PIMART
training course was developed to ensure that pharmacists who
successfully completed the training would be 'suitably qualified to
safely and effectively assist in providing ART'. Ms. Jankelowitz
informs the court that:
‘
'Since its
inception in 1998, SAHCS has been at the forefront of the battle
against this epidemic by driving and coordinating continuous
medical
education to all levels of healthcare workers, with the support of
local and international HIV experts committed to improving
HIV/TB
care in Southern Africa.'
She
explains that the individuals involved in designing the guidelines
and training course for PIMART are all specialists, clinicians
and/or
academics regarded as being at the top of their field.
[31]
The same individuals compiled the SAHCS's Advanced HIV Management
Course for Doctors, NIMART, Advanced HIV Management courses for
nurses, and Advanced HIV Disease courses for doctors.
[66]
There
is no basis for finding that the SAPC's decision was taken for an
ulterior purpose or that the SAPC acted with an ulterior
motive.
[32]
The extensive record with numerous minutes of meetings of the SAPC
and its respective committees is indicative thereof that the
SAPC
applied its mind considering the development and implementation of
PIMART.
[67]
In
considering whether the decision to implement PIMART is irrational,
arbitrary, or capricious,
[33]
one has to consider the context within which the decision was taken.
Arbitrariness has been held to 'connote c
aprice,
or the exercise of the will instead of reason or principle; without a
consideration of the merits.'
[34]
The word has also been said to denote 'the absence of reason or, at
the very least, the absence of a justifiable reason'.
[35]
It can also be said to be a decision lacking in logic.
[36]
[68]
Although the SAPC did not provide IPA with the reasons for its
decision to implement PIMART
when reasons were requested in October
2021, the reasons provided by the SAPC, and the additional
information provided by Ms. Jankelowitz,
dispel any suspicion that
the decision to implement PIMART was taken arbitrarily or
capriciously. The existing pilot projects emphasise
the value of the
initiative. The untapped value of pharmacists in fighting HIV was
emphasised by the efficient role pharmacies
played in meeting health
care needs, and providing health care services during the Covid-19
pandemic. The idea to implement the
PIMART initiative is not a mere
whim, it is consistent with the WHO's vision and a worldwide movement
to promote widely accessible
primary health care.
[69]
The SAPC's contention that neither PrEP nor PEP requires a diagnosis
before it can be administered
stands uncontested. PrEP, explains the
SAPC, requires a standardised protocol, which includes eligibility
requirements, treatment
protocols, and contra-indications, all of
which pharmacists have been trained to understand and implement.
[70]
External conditions that are objectively determinable and do not
require any diagnosis
underpin providing PEP to patients. As
explained above,
PEP is medication provided to
persons who may have had a recent exposure to HIV to prevent
infection with HIV, which must be provided
as soon as possible and
within 72 hours of the probable exposure. Pharmacists registered to
provide PCDT services and issued with
s 22A(15)
-permits are already
authorised to provide '
Occupational Post Exposure HIV
Prophylaxis for Health Care Workers'. I see no reason why pharmacists
who have successfully completed
the existing accredited PIMART
training course, cannot prescribe PrEP and PEP to members of the
public. It does not make logical
sense on any level that a female can
receive emergency contraception from a pharmacy within 72 hours after
having intercourse,
consensually or otherwise, but not simultaneously
be provided with potentially lifesaving PEP, while a health worker
who was exposed
to HIV during the course of his or her employment,
can be provided with PEP at a pharmacy.
[71]
As far as the initiation of first-line ART and TPT is concerned,
IPA's overarching concern
seems to be rooted in its view that the
treatment of HIV is oversimplified and that it does not cater to the
inherent complexities
associated with HIV treatment. If regard is
had, however, to the existing supplementary PCDT training, the
accreditation criteria
for the PIMART training course, the extent of
the training course as it was developed by specialists in the field,
and the proviso
for referral to another health care provider where
for example, discordant results are obtained, I am of the view that
the SAPC
extensively considered the development and implementation of
PIMART. The need to widen access to first-line ART and TPT on
community
level is not a figment of SAPC's imagination, but a dire
need that is also evinced in other countries. The decision to utilise
PIT as a vehicle for PIMART and to enable adequately trained
pharmacists to provide PIMART services is a decision that is
rationally
connected to the purpose for which it was taken, the
information before the SAPC and the reasons provided for it by the
SAPC. It
is also a decision that is rationally connected to the
SAPC's objective to assist in the promotion of the health of the
population
of the Republic.
Miscellaneous
issues
Condonation
[72]
In the notice of motion, IPA seeks that the period of 180-days
referred to in
s 7(1)
of PAJA, to the extent that it is deemed
necessary, be extended in terms of
s 9(1)(b)
to the date of service
of the application on the respondents.
[73]
IPA explains that consequent to the publication of Board Notice 101
of 2021 on 13 August
2023, and after numerous consultations with its
legal representatives, it requested the SAPC to provide reasons for
its decision
to implement, and the implementation of PIMART. The
request, however, went unanswered, and by the time the application
was issued,
no reasons were provided. Upon the expiry of the 90-day
period for such reasons to have been provided, IPA instructed their
attorneys
to proceed with the review application.
[74]
The SAPC did not explicitly take issue with IPA's condonation
application in its answering
affidavit, save for stating in general
that it opposes all of the relief sought in the application by IPA.
The SAPC, in turn, requested
condonation for the late filing of its
answering affidavit.
[75]
Section 7(1)(b)
provides that any proceedings for judicial review
must be instituted
without unreasonable delay and
not later than 180 days after the date on which the person concerned
became aware of the action and
the reasons for it.
In
casu
, reasons for the decision were
requested on 11 October 2021. IPA ostensibly became aware of the
SAPC's decision to implement and
the implementation of the PIMART
initiative on publication of Board Notice 101 of 2021 in the
Government Gazette
of
13 August 2021. Reasons for the decision were requested on 11 October
2021, within the stipulated 90-day period. The application
was
instituted in February 2022, well within the 180-day period provided
for in
s 7(1)
, and the papers do not indicate that it was not
instituted without unreasonable delay.
[76]
The late filing of the SAPC's answering affidavit is condoned.
Striking
out application
[77]
A litigant must make out its case in its founding papers.
IPA
sought to make an impermissible case in reply by attaching supporting
affidavits of several associations supporting the review
application.
It contends in its heads of argument that a '
multitude
of associations operating within the professional medical ambit stand
opposed to the implementation of PIMART as provided
for in Notice 101
of 2021 and the amendment to inter alia the scope of practice of
pharmacists'.
Nine professional
associations are mentioned and listed for the first time in the
replying affidavit. These professional associations
are not parties
to the litigation, and the affidavit-annexures attached to the
replying affidavit in support of the review application
were not
placed before the Council and do not form part of the record. The
application to strike the new matter contained in the
replying
affidavit and the annexures to the replying affidavit is granted.
[78]
The existence of the affidavits attached to IPA's
replying affidavit is indicative of the fact that the associations
mentioned are
aware of the review proceedings. No applications for
joinder were instituted. In considering whether this court should
mero motu
order the joinder of the parties mentioned in the replying affidavit,
both parties' counsel submitted that it is in the interest
of justice
for the review application to proceed. It was submitted that these
associations were aware of the proceedings and would
have frequented
to join if they deemed it in their best interest. The application
proceeded.
Costs
[79]
There is no reason to deviate from the principle that costs follow
success.
ORDER
In
the result, the following order is granted:
1.
The application is dismissed with costs.
E van der Schyff
Judge of the High Court
Delivered:
This judgment is handed down electronically by uploading it to the
electronic file of this matter on CaseLines.
As a courtesy gesture,
it will be sent to the parties/their legal representatives by email.
For the applicant:
Adv. J.C. Uys SC
Instructed by:
BRAND POTGIETER
INCORPORATED
For the first
respondent:
Adv. B. Leech SC
With:
Adv. S.L. Mohapi
Instructed by:
WERKMANS ATTORNEYS
Date of the
hearing:
23 May 2023
Date of judgment:
14 August 2023
[1]
Communicated
in terms of Board Notice 17 of 2021.
[2]
In
terms of Board Notice 101 of 2021.
[3]
IPA
was at pains to indicate each impugned action and the corresponding
PAJA review ground in its heads of argument.
[4]
In
this regard, Professor JR de Ville holds the view that the common
law grounds of review that are not explicitly mentioned in
s6(2)
of
PAJA
can
furthermore easily be accommodated within
s 6(2)(i)
which provides
for review if ‘the action is otherwise unconstitutional or
unlawful’.
[5]
[2004] ZACC 15
;
2004 (4) SA 490
(CC) at par
[25]
.
[6]
https://www.who.int/publications/i/item/9789241549684. Accessed on
14 July 2023.
[7]
https://www.unaids.org/sites/default/files/media_asset/undetectable-untransmittable_en.pdf.
Accessed
on 14 July 2023.
[8]
P
rE
P
is the use of antiretroviral drugs by HIV-uninfected individuals to
prevent HIV infection. – Kennedy, C. Yeh, P.T.
et
al
‘PrEP distribution in pharmacies: a systematic review’
(2022)
BMJ
Open
12(2) https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8860049/.
Accessed on 13 July 2023. It is usually provided to HIV
-
negative
persons who may be deemed to be at a high risk of contracting HIV
due to various factors
,
e.g.,
persons
with
p
artners
engaging in sexually risky behavior and sex workers. PrEP is the
acronym for pre-exposure prophylaxis.
[9]
PEP
is medication provided to persons who may have had a recent exposure
to HIV to prevent infection with HIV. – ‘Accessibility
of PrEP and PEP across the world’ -
https://sexualhealthalliance.com/nymphomedia-blog/accessibility-of-prep-and-pep-across-the-world.
Accessed on 13 July 2023.
[10]
Georgeo,
D. Colvin, C.J
et
al
.
(2012)’Implementing nurse-initiated and managed antiretroviral
treatment (NIMART) in South Africa: a qualitative process
evaluation
of the STRETCH trial.
Implementation
Sci
7-66; Jones, M. and Cameron, D. (2017) ‘Evaluating 5 years’
NIMART mentorning in South Africa’s HIV treatment
programme:
Success, challenges and future needs’
S
Afr Med J
107(10)
839-842.
[11]
‘
Task
Shifting – Global Recommendations and Guidelines’
(2008).
https://apps.who.int/iris/bitstream/handle/10665/43821/9789241596312_eng.pdf.
Accessed on 13 July 2023.
[12]
Zhao,
A. Dangerfield II, D.T.
et
al
.
Pharmacy-Based Interventions to Increase Use of HIV Pre-exposure
Prophylaxis in the United States: A Scoping Review (2022)
AIDS
Behav
26 (5), 1377-1392
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8527816/. Accessed on
13 July 2023. Several states have, however
proposed legislation that
will allow pharmacists to initiate PrEp and PEP – NASTAD
Pharmacist-Initiated PrEP and PEP
https://nastad.org/sites/default/files/2021-11/PDF-Pharmacist-Initiated-PrEP-PEP.pdf
. Accessed on 13 July 2023.
[13]
Urano,
K
et
al.
‘Impact of physician-pharmacist collaborative protocol-based
pharmacotherapy management for HIV outpatients: a retrospective
cohort study’
https://jphcs.biomedcentral.com/articles/10.1186/s40780-020-00165-9
. Accessed on 28 July 2023.
[14]
See
notes [8] and [9] above for an explanation of the acronyms.
[15]
Gilbert,
L. (1998) ‘Dispensing Doctors and Prescribing Pharmacists: A
South African Perspective’
Soc.
Sci. Med.
Volume 46, No. 1, 83-95.
[16]
Pascall,
G and Robinson, K. (1993) ‘Health work: division in health
care labour.’ In
Dilemmas
in Health Care
,
eds B. Davey and J. Popay, 83-103. Open University Press.
[17]
Eaton,
G and Webb, B. (1979) Boundary encroachment: pharmacists in the
clinical setting.
Sociology
of Health and Illness 1, 69-89.
[18]
See note [11] above.
[19]
SAPHRA
Guideline.
https://www.sahpra.org.za/wp-content/uploads/2022/05/SAHPGL-CEM-NS-04_v3-Scheduling-of-Substances-for-Prescribing-by-Authorised-Prescribers-other-than-Medical-Practitioners-or-Dentists.pdf.
Accessed on 14 July 2023
.
[20]
SAPHRA
Guideline, supra, at par [2.2].
[21]
‘
Notwithstanding
anything to the contrary contained in this section … (b) no
nurse or a person registered under the Health
Professions Act, 1974,
other than a medical practitioner or dentist may prescribe a
medicine or Scheduled substance unless he
or she has been authorized
to do so by his or her professional counsel concerned.’
[22]
https://www.sahpra.org.za/wp-content/uploads/2022/05/SAHPGL-CEM-NS-04_v3-Scheduling-of-Substances-for-Prescribing-by-Authorised-Prescribers-other-than-Medical-Practitioners-or-Dentists.pdf.
Accessed on 14 July 2023.
[23]
Medicine
means the profession of a person registered as a medical
practitioner or an intern in medicine.
[24]
GNR.
237 of 6 March 2009 published in GG No. 31958.
[25]
S
4(zJ)
of the
Pharmacy Act.
[26
]
GNR.
1158 0f 20 November 2000.
[27]
Janse
van Rensburg NO v Minister of Trade and Industry NO
2001
(1) SA 29
(CC) at par [24].
[28]
Hoexter,
C. Administrative Law in South Africa, 2
nd
ed, JUTA at 362.
[29]
See,
e.g.,
ss 30(1)(c)
;
54
(1),
68
(3);
72
(2).
[30]
S
6(2)(d).
[31]
The
team includes the Head of Division of Infectious Diseases, Helen
Jospeh Hospital at the University of the Witwatersrand, a
Professor
of Medicine, Ezintsha, University of the Witwatersrand, the Chief
Specialist and Head of the Department of Infectious
Diseases at the
University of KwaZulu-Natal, a medical doctor and a former
Infectious Diseases physician.
[32]
S
6(2)(e)(ii).
[33]
S
6(2)(e)(vi).
[34]
Johannesburg
Liquor Licensing Board v Kuhn
1963
(4) SA 666 (A) 671.
[35]
Woolworths
(Pty) Ltd v Whitehead
2000
(3) SA 529
(LAC) par [128].
[36]
De
Ville, J.R., ‘Judicial Review of Administrative Action in
South Africa’ 2005 LexisNexis, fn33 at p 198.
sino noindex
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