Community pharmacy : symptoms, diagnosis, and treatment / Paul Rutter.
Material type:
- 9780702069970
- RA 427.9 .R88 2017

Item type | Current library | Home library | Collection | Call number | Copy number | Status | Date due | Barcode | |
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National University - Manila | LRC - Main General Circulation | Pharmacy | GC RA 427.9 .R88 2017 (Browse shelf(Opens below)) | c.1 | Available | NULIB000016527 |
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GC RA 410.56 .B47 2011 Essentials of health care marketing / | GC RA 410.56 .J67 2021 Pharmaceutical management and marketing / | GC RA 427. 9 .K86 2009 Health education and community pharmacy / | GC RA 427.9 .R88 2017 Community pharmacy : symptoms, diagnosis, and treatment / | GC RA 440.5 .N35 2000 c.1 Health promotion : foundations for practice / | GC RA 440.5 .N35 2000 c.2 Health promotion : foundations for practice / | GC RA 440.6 .V35 1995 Valuing health care : costs, benefits, and effectiveness of pharmaceuticals and other medical technologies / |
Includes bibliographical references and index.
Making a diagnosis -- Respiratory system -- Ophthalmology -- Ear conditions -- Central nervous system -- Women's health -- Gastroenterology -- Dermatology -- Musculoskeletal conditions -- Paediatrics -- Specific product requests.
Now in its fourth edition, this best-selling book is fully updated to address the ever increasing demands on healthcare professionals to deliver high-quality patient care. A multitude of factors impinge on healthcare delivery today, including an ageing population, more sophisticated medicines, high patient expectation and changing health service infrastructure. Time demands on primary care doctors have caused other models of service delivery to be adopted across the world, leading to ongoing changes in the traditional boundaries of care between doctors, nurses, and pharmacists. Certain medical tasks are now being performed by nurses and pharmacists, for example prescribing. Healthcare policies to encourage patients to manage their own health have led to more medicines becoming available over the counter, allowing community pharmacists to manage and treat a wide range of conditions. Further deregulation of medicines to treat acute illness from different therapeutic areas seems likely. Government policy now encourages chronic disease management as a self-care activity, and could well be the largest area for future growth of reclassification of medicines. Pharmacists, now more than ever before, need to be able to recognise the signs and symptoms, and use an evidence-based approach to treatment. Community Pharmacy is intended for all non-medical prescribers but especially for pharmacists, from undergraduate students to experienced practitioners.
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