For older people and frail people, the long-term benefit of medicines reduces and the potential for harm from adverse effects increases. When the benefit–risk balance changes in this way, medicine review and optimisation are important to simplify the therapeutic regimen, reduce inappropriate medicines and minimise risks. In this article, pharmacist prescriber Linda Bryant uses two case studies to illustrate important considerations during medicine reviews
A few words from…Alex McLeod
+Opinion
In print
A few words from…Alex McLeod
Friday 2 September 2022, 09:00 AM

Rural generalist Alex McLeod and Coromandel’s “town cat”, “Helen Clark” [image: suppled]
Alex McLeod is from Wairarapa. Kōtarani, Ingarihi, Werehi, ko Ngāti Kahungunu ona tīpuna (Scottish, English, Welsh and Ngāti Kahungunu are his ancestors). A rural generalist, he worked as a rural hospital doctor in Taupō until last summer. He now lives at Harataunga/Kennedy Bay, over a steep, hilly road from where he works at Coromandel Family Health Centre
The best thing about my job is mountain biking to and from work, and the view out across Tīkapa Moana (the Hauraki Gulf) as I cross the hill, Tokatea,
Kia ora and welcome to New Zealand Doctor Rata Aotearoa
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