


Welcome to the May 2012 homepage edition of i2P-Information to Pharmacists. Rollo Manning has been having some time out having staples removed from the site of his open heart surgery.He is now at home recuperating in Darwin, having arrived home last Friday, beating a cold and hasty retreat from Canberra.We all wish him a speedy recovery and hopefully, he will be fit enough to contribute by next month.
This month, Pharmedia discusses the toll that is taken when someone complains about you to an authority without good cause. Well, the good news is that you can now take action to protect yourself if such a complaint is made, and that may even include action for defamation. Read about a recent case involving two doctors, with Mark Coleman drawing on personal experience to illustrate.
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Volume 2 Number 1
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Volume 3 Number 1
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Volume 4 Number 1
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Volume 4 Number 4
![]() | Staff Writer |
Editing and Researching news and stories about global and local Pharmacy Issues | |
Editor's Note: We have always known that a poor diet affected health.
Apart from the choice of food there is also evidence that processed foods destroy nutrients valuable to health, there are further problems in the way crops are grown (mineral deficiencies in soil) and the "factory farming" of animals and the way they have to be treated with substances such as antibiotics.
Add water and air pollution and the assault on human (and animal) health is intense.
Water pollution has as a primary cause pharmaceutical drugs inserting themselves into the environment through sewerage.
Those of us trained in clinical nutrition have known that nutritional supplementation to balance the effects of a bad diet is required to sustain general health.
Pharmacists seeking to direct their clinical efforts into developing nutritional support programs are likely to find patients willing to pay for this type of personalised attention.
As an adjunct to managing lifestyle illnesses and provide another benefit of a lower carbon footprint-this type of activity should provide pharmacists with a suitable direction to engage their under-utilised talents.
The following media release by the Public Health Association of Australia may prove to be the impetus required for a universal movement in a positive direction.
Australians are eating themselves to death and our food choices are one of the nation’s leading causes of environmental damage, according to a new report released today (15 February) by the Public Health Association of Australia (PHAA).
At today’s launch of A Future for Food 2, the PHAA made an urgent call to the Federal Government to take responsibility for the crisis in our food system and establish a dedicated Ministry of Food with a position within Cabinet to drive cross-portfolio efforts.
PHAA Chief Executive Officer (CEO) Michael Moore said obesity and other diet-related disease were evidence of a serious failure of the current food system and a ‘do nothing’ approach will allow the system to slip into crisis.
"There is growing evidence that in Australia a poor diet contributes more to people being sick than any other single risk factor including tobacco and alcohol."
“Australians need to eat less and eat differently to address the sky-high rates of preventable diet-related disease. The current food system is skewed towards energy dense foods that are high in fat, sugar and salt. We need to make healthy food choices the easiest and most affordable option for all Australians.”
The PHAA also believes that while the phenomenon of diet-related disease is grabbing headlines and what is not recognised is the significant impact of our food choices on carbon emissions. The association pointed out that more than 30% of Australia’s carbon footprint is related to food production.
According to PHAA Food and Nutrition spokesperson, Associate Professor Heather Yeatman from the University of Wollongong’s School of Health Sciences public health nutrition has the responsibility to promote food that is not only healthy, but also environmentally sustainable.
“There is overwhelming evidence that certain diets and styles of eating impact more heavily on the environment than others. Fortunately, an environmentally sustainable diet is also a diet that protects against preventable disease,” Professor Yeatman said.
“Moving toward a plant-based diet with smaller amounts of meat from sustainable sources and reducing consumption of highly processed foods -- such as takeaway foods that rely on fossil fuel use in production, or use excess packaging -- will help to achieve two goals.
“These goals are reducing the incidence of diet-related disease and reducing the impact of the food system on the environment,” Professor Yeatman said.
Mr Moore said working with the food industry was essential to implement changes in the food system, however, vested interests must not drive the policy decisions of governments. The food-related research and policy actions of government in the different sectors of health, primary industry, environment and social justice must also be connected.
“The Federal Government must lead the collaboration and establish a healthy, sustainable and fair food system with public and environmental health at its core,” Mr Moore said.
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Kay Dunkley - BPharm, Grad Dip Hosp Pharm, Grad Dip Health Admin, MPS, MSHPA: Taking care of pharmacists’ health – what is it worth? | open full screen
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Neil Johnston: An Evidence-Based Conversation Between Ken Harvey, Gerald Quigley and Neil Johnston- Part 2 | open full screen
Kay Dunkley - BPharm, Grad Dip Hosp Pharm, Grad Dip Health Admin, MPS, MSHPA: Tax time – a donation to PSS is a gift to your profession and a deduction for you | open full screen
Neil Retallick: Good news for community pharmacy from the Minister of Agriculture | open full screen
Dr Ian Colclough: While doctors remain disempowered doctor shoppers needing help will die. | open full screen
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