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Digital Nomads – Providing Clinical Services That Appeal

There’s a growing opportunity that is emerging among professionals who are adapting to a nomadic lifestyle. You don’t have to be “grey” to qualify for the lifestyle – and it can accommodate any age. It does however, require a full confidence in your knowledge base and have some tech-savvy skills in addition. Welcome to the…
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Nissan Foresees Offices Powered by Electric Cars – We see Electric Cars Becoming Offices Occupied by Digital Nomads

Electric vehicles have potential to change the way we live beyond transportation. No longer a question of ‘if,’ but a matter of ‘when,’ electric vehicles are already changing the status quo of transportation. And they will have a niche within pharmacy. We’re at the beginning of one of the few times in human history where…
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Embracing the Empowered Patient

The year 2016 ushered in a range of problems that caught health care providers generally unprepared as events unfolded. We all tend to keep in our own silos and do not necessarily take on an awareness with what is happening in the world of doctors, nurses and allied health practitioners unless they impact us directly…
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The Move Towards PBS Privatisation – It is a Possibility and Could Provide a Wrecking Ball for Community Pharmacy

I am always suspicious of government motivation when they move the chess pieces around the board without an appropriate explanation. Dating back to the start of the Coalition taking power there was discussion that highlighted the poorly defined role private health insurance plays in the funding and delivery of Australian health care, and how government…
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RFID Is a Basic Step Towards Specialist Goods & Services Success

Specialist Retailers like Rebecca Minkoff are benefiting more from service and supply chain agility. Australian specialist pharmacies lag well behind. Today, consumers are more informed, empowered and demanding. As the line between the physical and digital worlds blurs, retailers must differentiate themselves to drive customer loyalty. That means delighting customers and patients beyond expectation while getting…
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Diluting the debate

When we are asked what sort of tea we want at a cafè, we select an option. We know what we want – English breakfast tastes different that Earl Grey, Green Tea and others. So, we acknowledge that teas have different properties, different tastes, different “actives”. What is it then so hard for pharmacists to…
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BMJ Suppresses Information – Informant Responds

Please see below my email to Fiona Godlee, editor-in-chief of The BMJ. This is also relevant to other aluminium-adjuvanted vaccines, e.g. HPV and pertussis. The more I look into vaccination policy and practice, the more appalled I become. Vaccination policy has been effectively hijacked by the vaccine industry. Children all around the world are…
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Trust – It Always Has to be Worked at

Pharmacy always appears in national polls measuring trust, and always in the first three, with results for pharmacists, nurses and doctors all highly ranked and all close together. Trust is an elusive concept to quantify and when evaluating, only a subjective opinion can be formed as a measurement. But in human beings it is something…
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Disruptive Technology for Patient Engagement

New technologies pave the way for innovation to drive business practices in pharmacy. Unfortunately, innovation appears to be a slow process in Australian pharmacies and as a result there is a pent-up frustration among young pharmacists that nothing is happening. On the other side of the coin there seems to be a majority of pharmacy…
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Patient Engagement – Start With The Salutation

Health is a very personal business and trust is a very important element in the “engagement” mix as far as delivering information about conditions or medications, and the mentoring required when transferring knowledge and understanding. Engagement is a two-way process and involves system and style. For example, I have often used my knowledge of family…