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
Going private: Auckland hapū well covered
+Business
In print
Going private: Auckland hapū well covered
Thursday 28 October 2021, 12:30 PM

Anahera Rawiri is taking the nib health insurance idea beyond the hapū that first embraced it, Ngāti Whātua Ōrākei [Jos Wheeler]
Alan Perrott finds out how group insurance cover transforms the quality of a hapū’s healthcare experience – so much so, the idea is being taken to other Māori entities
Full cover under the nib/Ngāti Whātua Ōrākei plan, up to $300,000 per person per year for private surgical hospitalisation
up to $200,000 per person per year for private non-surgical hospitalisation,
Kia ora and welcome to New Zealand Doctor Rata Aotearoa
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