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Monday, 2nd November 2009 Change Date Latest Issue

Pharmacists to offer advice on alcoholism and depression

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Published Date: 02 July 2009
PHARMACIES in the Capital are set to provide help with alcoholism and mental health after being handed further powers as part of a pilot scheme.
Chemists in the city will add to their growing list of services over the coming weeks in a bid to make treatment more accessible and take the strain off GP surgeries.

The pilot sites – at two chemists in Shandwick Place and the Inch – recently beg
an providing sexual health testing, and if the move is successful it could see the scheme rolled out across the city.

It is understood anyone presenting themselves at a pharmacy displaying symptoms of ill health which could be attributed in some way to alcohol will be offered help. This would see a person offered one-to-one counselling and general information, with the option of being referred to a GP should that not work.

The two pharmacies will also deal with mild symptoms of mental illness, such as moderate depression, another huge problem which chokes up doctors' surgeries across the city.

NHS Lothian's director of pharmacy Profesor Pat Murray said: "This is a further welcome expansion of community pharmacy healthcare services, which I'm sure will be well received by the public.

"Our community pharmacists are highly skilled health professionals able to provide advice and treatment on a whole host of minor illnesses and ailments.

"Being able to access these services by dropping in while out for lunch or shopping will offer a quick and convenient service."

The Scottish Government launched the Pharmore project last year to encourage busy workers to get health checks without the hassle of booking a GP appointment and taking time off work.

The services offered run into the evening and weekends and will run until 2010, at which point the pilot's success will be evaluated.

So far the initiative has produced mixed results. The pharmacists involved say traditionally difficult groups to target such as men or ethnic minorities are seeking advice when they wouldn't generally visit a GP.

However, the Evening News revealed last month that NHS Lothian's target of having 40 per cent of smokers who quit doing so through help from a pharmacy has fallen woefully short, at only eight per cent.

Other initiatives such as needle exchanges and testing for blood-borne disease – both of which rely on word-of-mouth for awareness among at-risk groups – are also bedding in at the two pharmacies.

Deborah Zuckert, primary care pharmacist co-ordinator for the project, added: "Our community pharmacists and healthcare staff at both pharmacies will be providing services which are not usually offered in a pharmacy setting and this pilot will help us examine what services can be offered by community pharmacies to the public."





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  • Last Updated: 02 July 2009 11:53 AM
  • Source: Edinburgh Evening News
  • Location: Edinburgh
 
1

Peter - very disappointed/concerned,

Edinburgh 02/07/2009 12:12:57
Just another example of British politicians and the NHS doing thimgs on the cheap - typical of Britain today.
2

,

02/07/2009 12:26:10
Comment Removed By Administrator
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3

alfonsa pedrosa,

embra 02/07/2009 12:29:52
This sounds good,if this does take presure of the GPs maybe it will leave them to deal will more serious ailments.
4

soapy1,

02/07/2009 12:30:52
What happens if they get it wrong, if somwe dispairing soul ended it all because of bad advice/medication?
will these pharmacists be liable for recompense througth the courts by berieved families as doctors are?
Are chemists willing to accept the terms a sdoctors in this regard?
The first law suits will no doubt tell Doctros diagnose, chemists provide the medicines this is why doctors undergo years of training in their fields, you may just as well visit a witchdoctor as a pharmacist!
5

Peter - very disappointed/concerned,

Edinburgh 02/07/2009 12:33:18
#6 alfonsa pedrosa,

Maybe it will take the GPs away, full-stop.
6

Alternative (High-Octane) Fuel Head,

Edinburgh 02/07/2009 12:43:45
Alcohol and depression???

Mmmmm.... Yes.

If you're feeling a bit down, get yourself down the pub and get a few beers down you. You'll soon feel better!
7

,

02/07/2009 12:52:47
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8

,

02/07/2009 12:55:13
Comment Removed By Administrator
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9

Alternative (High-Octane) Fuel Head,

Edinburgh 02/07/2009 13:03:55
Go and have a drink Rebecca
10

,

02/07/2009 13:04:14
Comment Removed By Administrator
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11

,

02/07/2009 13:19:23
Comment Removed By Administrator
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12

Alternative (High-Octane) Fuel Head,

Edinburgh 02/07/2009 13:22:53
#14:

"shut your stupid face."

Charming!

I take it that you are an agressive drunk then.

Chill out lady!
13

reincarnated,

Edinburgh 02/07/2009 13:31:18
The barmaid told me the drink was non-alcoholic, but where was the proof?
14

,

02/07/2009 13:39:50
Comment Removed By Administrator
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15

Jaco Pastorius,

Tegucigalpa 02/07/2009 13:50:29
Drinking is really funny, isn't it? Ho ho ho. Look at the funny drunk. Ha ha ha. See him stagger home after eighteen pints of angry. Hee hee hee. Watch him beat his wife. Ha ha ha. Look at all that vomit. Ho ho ho. Always bits of tomato in it, isn't there? Ha ha ha. Now see him fall down the stairs. Ho ho ho. Hey, he's broken his collarbone! Hee hee hee.

And so on, and so on.
16

Alternative (High-Octane) Fuel Head,

Edinburgh 02/07/2009 13:51:38
"I am not a lady Petrolhead"

Judging by the tone of your posts, it would appear that perhaps you are not.

If you are of the male gender, why do you have a patently female handle? Is this an attempt at some kind of "in" idea?

How do you treat someone "fidderently"? You must be drunk.

Gender is not an issue. I treat everyone with exactly the same contempt.
17

elayne,

02/07/2009 13:55:57
im not too sure if people will go for advice on drinking,its not the sort of thing one tells strangers,however well intentioned it is
18

,

02/07/2009 14:16:59
Comment Removed By Administrator
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19

english charlie,

02/07/2009 14:31:45
Pharmacists are there to sell drugs. I'm sure that their company would make more money selling drugs, than by giving proper advice.
20

Alternative (High-Octane) Fuel Head,

Edinburgh 02/07/2009 15:02:17
#24:

Naturally...

The advice will be be to buy and take some of the wonderous new medicines and remedies that have just come into stock.
21

Jaco Pastorius,

Tegucigalpa 02/07/2009 15:10:46
24. Pharamacists could make a lot more money selling illegal drugs. Ask my friend Rqoihba.
22

John JP,

02/07/2009 19:26:52
This is really quite simple, Pharmacists are not clinicians like Doctors and Nurses therefore should not be holding clinics and diagnosing. Its as clear cut as that.
23

is it me?,

Edinburgh 02/07/2009 20:35:59
I think it's a breach of my human rights that I'm not allowed to comment on the,

"Pants sniffer threatened to shoot camper", story.

(On Calton Hill no less).

Commenting on this sort of story would ease my depression more than the NHS ever could.
24

elayne,

02/07/2009 22:16:35
#28 i wondered that myself,as soon as i saw "pants sniffer"i thought"oh aye"but it was the potential for smutty comments i suppose
25

bluehead,

edinburgh 03/07/2009 08:02:52
what do the poor old chemists say about all this?
anytime I have had to speak to them for some advice ,it has been very clear, indeed, that they were run of their feet
for the life of me I cannot see chemists having the time to do any more than they are already doing,they must ,like the rest of us realise that this labour goverment are of their head,
I have never seen such a bunch of clowns as broonie and his mob,they are a disgrace!!!!
26

Peter - very disappointed/concerned,

Edinburgh 03/07/2009 10:44:54
#28 is it me? & 29 Elayne,

"I think it's a breach of my human rights that I'm not allowed to comment on the, "Pants sniffer threatened to shoot camper", story."

Like both of you, I am very disappointed and concerned that the EEN has dis-allowed comments on the pants sniffer article, indeed, I think it really stinks.
27

Peter - very disappointed/concerned,

Edinburgh 03/07/2009 11:29:25
Perhaps there is some value in this suggestion.

An interesting story appeared in last Saturday's Scotsman supplement reporting the successful use of a drug called 'Baclofen' which a French doctor, himself an alcoholic had successfully used to remove/cure his own severe addiction.

One wonders, if given Scotland's alcohol problems how quickly Alex Salmond and the Scottish Parlaiment might introduce this medication for use by the Scottish people? You also wonder how quickly NICE will shoot it down in flames, now there's a misnomer - NICE, there's nothing 'nice' about that bunch of would-be accountants hidding behind medical degrees.

28

tomias,

Edinburgh 06/07/2009 13:25:49
DATES ??????????????????????????????????????????

 

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