Continuing Education

Complete this month's Continuing Education questions to qualify for extra NZ College of Pharmacists credits. go

Last month's answers here

Tip Of The Week


When dispensing chloramphemicol it is vital to carefully assess the seriousness of the condition and to refer when necessary.

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 2 March

Casino Pharmacy?

They say it's hard to surprise residents of Nevada, but a pharmacy located within a casino is causing many to do a double take.
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19 February

Weed, booze and other old school meds

Granted, hindsight is 20/20, but some awfully strange substances have been used for pharmaceutical purposes in the past. Here are some vintage advertisements touting items that we might balk at taking today.
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 12 February

Homeopathy skeptics

The New Zealand Skeptics have taken up the sword against homeopathy. Check out their campaign.
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3 February

A day at the pharmacy

The comings and goings from a provincial small-town pharmacy in the UK. Bozos, weirdos, freaks and the occasional lovely patient. Plus the occasional educational post, er, maybe. 
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25 January

Classifieds - not to be taken seriously

Ever gone through a list of classifieds for a laugh? Here area a few top examples...

 

11 January

Why pay for the care of the careless?

In August last year an emergency medicine physician at the University of Mississippi Medical Centre in the US, sent a letter to the editor of the Clarion Ledger, Jackson, Mississippi. It was published under the title "Why pay for the care of the careless?" and has since turned into an email circling the globe. Why? Possibly because it criticises a patient's lifestyle choices and in so doing, quite accurately puts the blame for the global publicly funded healthcare crisis down to a "Culture Crisis" instead of a "Health Care Crisis". Here is the letter written by Dr Starner Jones...
 
During my last night's shift in the ER, I had the pleasure of  evaluating a patient with an expensive shiny gold tooth, multiple elaborate expensive tattoos, a very expensive brand of tennis shoes and a new cellular telephone equipped with her favourite R&B tune for a ringtone.  Glancing  over the chart, one could not help noticing her payer status: Medicaid. She smokes more than one costly pack of cigarettes every day and, somehow, still has money to buy beer. 

And our Congress expects me to pay for this woman's health care?  Our nation's health care crisis is not a shortage of  quality hospitals, doctors or nurses.  It is a crisis of  culture - a culture in which it is perfectly acceptable to spend money on vices while refusing to take  care of one's self or, heaven forbid, purchase health insurance.  A culture that  thinks "I can do whatever  I want to because someone else will always take care of  me". 
Life is really not that hard. Most of us reap what we sow.  Don't you agree?

 


 

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