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
Socialisation, mental health and loneliness: A new study looks at the relationship
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Summer Hiatus
Socialisation, mental health and loneliness: A new study looks at the relationship
Saturday 4 January 2020, 06:00 AM

People without good mental wellbeing may reject meaningful others
As part of our Summer Hiatus we have selected some Practice pieces from throughout the year that you might like to revisit over the summer. This article links through to ELearning
What comes first – strong social connections or strong mental health (the chicken or the egg)? We all know older patients who are lonely but never alone, and those who are often alone but never lonely
The essential nature of mental health is that while it is related to the number of social connections and how good those connections are, the relation
Kia ora and welcome to New Zealand Doctor Rata Aotearoa
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