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
Ebola declared Public Health Emergency Of International Concern (PHEIC)
Ebola declared Public Health Emergency Of International Concern (PHEIC)

Geneva, 17 July 2019: “The signs are clear: people are still dying in the communities, health workers are still infected, and transmission is still going on.
"The epidemic is not under control and we need a change of gear: but this should not be about movement restrictions or the use of coercion on the affected population.
"Communities and patients need to be at the centre of the response, they need to be active participants.
"MSF has experienced first-hand how difficult it is to respond to this epidemic. We need to take stock of what is working and what is not working. In a context where contact tracing is not working fully, and all affected people are not reached, a large scale approach is needed for prevention, this means better access to vaccination for the population to reduce transmission.”