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Cost Of A Pint
The 'shocking' cost of alcohol misuse in Northern Ireland was highlighted by Health Minister Michael McGimpsey in June after estimates that its cost to society equates to £679.8million with a range of £500million to £884million. "This research shows that the cost to the Health Service alone may be as high as around £160million each year with a further cost of £82million to Social Services,î the Minister said. ìThese figures are particularly pertinent in the context of my Departmentís very challenging financial situation because this is money that could be spent providing key frontline services."
 
Heart In Hands
The British Heart Foundation Northern Ireland is appealing to fundraisers to help it reach its target of £80,000 by August. The campaign is to recruit more heart nurses to support patients throughout the province and to reduce secondary care admissions.
 
Haiti Fundraising
Staff at Holly Villa in the Tyrone and Fermanagh Hospital have raised over £320 for a group who are travelling to Haiti in October to build houses following the earthquake. The Tyrone Haiti Build is a project in conjunction with the Haven Partnership to support those affected by the disaster.
 
Secondary Care Supported
A new hospital in Omaghs fight for funding has been supported by Health Minister Michael McGimpsey. Speaking at a meeting with the Omagh joint liaison group, the Minister said: "I am fully committed to the development of the new Omagh hospital and will continue to press for the essential funding needed to make this a reality."
 
Commissioning Together
Pharmacists and GPs must work together to define the gaps in commissioning data, review how they can be filled and to determine the correct level of care provision for a particular area, according to Stephen Foster, the head of the new Healthcare Professionals Commissioning Network. The network is open to any health or social care professional who would like to engage in commissioning. tinyurl.com/HCPnetwork
 
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Written by Laure James - Editor Pharmacy in Focus   
Monday, 07 June 2010 14:20

The Pharmaceutical Society of Northern Ireland has published a consultation on new guidance to pharmacists on the provision of homeopathic products within a pharmacy. The draft guidance advises pharmacists that when providing a homeopathic product, the patient should be advised that there is no strong scientific or clinical evidence base for the efficacy of homeopathic products other than having a placebo effect.

Homeopathy is not a risk free form of alternative health treatment,î said Society registrar Brendan Kerr. ìThere are real dangers that a patient using homeopathic products may be failing to seek appropriate diagnosis of a more serious underlying condition. Therefore, in our role of protecting patient safety in pharmacy it is appropriate and necessary that formal professional guidance be issued to pharmacists on this matter.î

The new guidance comes following a report by the House of Commons Science and Technology Committee into homeopathy which reviewed the evidence base and found it was not an efficacious form of treatment. The report indicated that:


* The NHS should cease funding homeopathy
* The Medicines and Healthcare products Regulatory Agency (MHRA) should not allow homeopathic product labels to make medical claims without evidence of efficacy
* As they are not medicines, homeopathic products should no longer be licensed by the MHRA
* Labelling of homeopathic products should make it explicit that there is no scientific evidence that homeopathic products work beyond the placebo effect.