Test
Your Clinical Skills and Win $1000
The School of Pharmacy at the University of Tasmania is coordinating
a project to document community pharmacists' detection of drug
related problems and other clinical services. The School has
developed a classification system for drug related problems
and their resolution and is currently conducting a validation
process using internet based cases.
The process involves pharmacists assessing twenty short case
scenarios and assigning a type of medication-related issue,
a clinical significance and a set of recommendations to each
situation. It is painless and should only take about 40 minutes
to complete. All the data will be pooled and pharmacists' names
will be stored separately, only for the purpose of entering
the random draw.
By participating in the validation process, the pharmacist becomes
eligible for PSA Continuing Professional Development points
and will be entered into a draw for one of two $1000 cash prizes.
For further details about the PROMISe project, or to undertake
the validation set of cases, please visit the project website
at:
www.promise.id.au or
contact Peter Tenni, Clinical Pharmacy Project Manager, School
of Pharmacy, University of Tasmania.
Email pctenni@utas.edu.au
or telephone (03) 62261005.
This project is funded by the Commonwealth Department of Health
and Ageing as part of the Third Community Pharmacy Agreement.
The Pharmacy Guild of Australia manages the Third Community
Pharmacy Agreement Research and Development Grants Program.
For
a .pdf electronic file, click on this link
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EDITORIAL
Targeting
Roger Corbett
NEIL
JOHNSTON
Management
Consultant Perspective
As we are all aware,
the foray by Woolworths into pharmacy has nothing to do with health
and patient care.
Pharmacy is simply seen as a means of expanding a static Woolworths
sales base.
Even the claims that Woolworths could do it cheaper sounded a bit hollow
when a simple survey by a daily newspaper group, comparing a mail-order
pharmacy to Woolworths, pointed to a significant overall price difference.
Pharmacy prices beat Woolworths "hands-down".
An embarrassed Roger Corbett (Woolworths CEO) hastened to assure the
press that this had been somewhat of a technical oversight, and that
it was not going to happen again.
Really?
What about when all the community pharmacies are destroyed?
Will prices remain competitive?
It was nice to see the tables turned for a change.
PHARMA-GOSS
With
Rollo Manning
A
regular column reporting the news behind the news
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WHEN TOO MUCH PR ARE IS ALMOST ENOUGH
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STUDENT PROTEST ILL CONCEIVED
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AUTOMATED DISPENSING
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GENERICS TO SAVE GOVT PBS MONEY
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THE NT CATCHES UP WITH PHARMACY OWNERSHIP
FROM THE 1930s
Australian
pharmacy at war against obesity :
Part 1. Obesity the international terror
CON
BERBATIS
A
Pharmacy Researcher Perspective
In
Australia the war against obesity commenced quietly for health workers
on 18 September 2003 with the release of the National Health and Medical
Research Council's (NH&MRC's) 'Clinical practice guidelines for
the management of overweight and obesity in adults' (www.obesityguidelines.gov.au
). On 1 May 2004 a new chapter in the history of primary prevention
and primary care in Australia' community pharmacies may unfold with
the availability of the Schedule 3 (S3) agent orlistat the only efficacious
non-prescription weight-lowering pharmacotherapy. This report proposes
a national pharmacy strategy involving orlistat as a key weapon in the
war against the overwhelming threat posed by obesity to population health.
This is a referenced but un-reviewed report so should be carefully interpreted.
It is delivered in two parts over two editions of this publication.
Consultancy
- Will it be Now or Never?
KEN
STAFFORD
Consultant
Pharmacist Perspective
After last month's
exploration of the realms of future pharmacy I thought that I would
take a little time to reflect on where pharmacy consultancy stands at
present.
Neil, when calling for this month's contribution, asked how accreditation
was progressing in WA, so I thought I would do a little investigating.
AACP could not give me an exact figure on the number of pharmacists
actually accredited here in the West but said that "there were
lots".
I can accept that as being fairly accurate, given the number of pharmacists
I have visited in my job over the past four years who have either received
accreditation or who were working towards it.
All
the 'Ps' - And the Underlining Driver of Change
PAT
GALLAGHER
An
IT Consultant Perspective
I have been more
than a casual observer, perhaps voyeur, of the flack and general hubbub
created by the Woolworths matter.
An issue that has lots of heat and passion well mixed in with a fair
dose of politics.
Regardless of what happens today, next year and beyond, the spectre
of grocery competition should be seen against the way things will be
- not the way things are.
Then work out what the battlefield will look like and then decide how
best to cope, one way or another.
For
the Good of the God-Children
RALF
DAHME
President
ASMI
(Australian
Self-Medication Industry)
A
Speech delivered to the Pharmacy Practice Foundation
Having
just become a godfather for the first time, I've been reflecting on
what it means to have responsibility for nurturing potential and ensuring
the continuation of the best things we have to offer.
Abraham Lincoln said that "A child is a person who is going to
carry on what you have started....the fate of humanity is in his hands."
Hospitals
are Making me Better
LACHLAN
ROSE
Hospital
Pharmacist Perspective
Having
completed my pharmacy studies at university in 2003, my graduate year
began in January this year at the pharmacy department of St Vincent's
Hospital.
The shock of full-time work in a completely new environment ensured
that I hit the ground running.
Four months on, I can honestly say that I'm still running.
THE
SOLUTION IS SOLIDARITY
CATHERINE
BRONGER
A
Student Perspective
Editor's
Note: As the ongoing battle with Woolworths escalated with official
pharmacy, pharmacy students assisted by organising a demonstration,
plus helped to distribute a petition against proposed NSW state legislation.
This galvanised support with the community at large, and has established
a new dimension in the survival tactics of pharmacy.
An
Update on the Government's Expert Committee
VAL
JOHANSON
A
Complementary Healthcare Council Perspective
Editor's
Note: Since the recent PAN crisis, when a large number of complementary
medicines were involved in a product recall, the Federal Government
took the opportunity to establish an "expert committee" to
work out new ways of controlling these products.
There have been some concerns as to the direction this committee would
take, and whether the final result would be of benefit to the end user.
The following is a brief update.
Home
Medication Management Reviews -
A Perspective from a Division of GPs with a few years behind us.
HEATHER
PYM
Division
of General Practice Perspective
MBS
Item 900 - unique in the schedule, hailed the opportunity for General
Practitioners to work directly with the pharmacists their patients see
regularly and get paid for it.
The item also offers pharmacists the opportunity to expand their practice
into the community and be reimbursed for cognitive services of home
visiting referred patients and reporting medication related management
problems to the GP with the patient's permission.
This medication management innovation has been established for more
than three years. How is it all going?
Photo
Marketing Association
LES
BRENER
A
Digital Imaging Perspective
The
Pharmacy Group formed within the Photo Marketing Association's Australian
Division a year ago will meet at the PMA's Annual Convention in Darling
Harbour, Sydney on Sunday 23rd May 2004.
This will
take place alongside Photo Imaging World, a huge exhibition of photographic
equipment and materials.
The Convention itself and the exhibition run from Friday 21st May to
Sunday 23rd May, with the DIMA (Digital Imaging Marketing Association)
convention preceding it on Thursday 20th May.
Group Chairperson James Delahunty states that all pharmacists should
be come very much aware of the changes in the photographic world and
the effect on their profitability.
Major items of interest to pharmacists with the rapid escalation to
digital photography will be the Digital Photo Kiosks, which are appearing
in ever increasing numbers in both photo shops and pharmacies and in
the main, are consumer operated, thus freeing up staff to handle other
business.
In some cases these photo kiosks link in with point of sale registers
and/or minilabs and this will also be a topic for discussion.
Other items to be mentioned will be Cameraphones and their current and
future effect on the industry.
There will also be discussion on developing and printing services including
conventional D & P in pharmacies, as obviously, many pharmacists
cannot consider the expense of entering the digital world yet.
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