The British Journal of Clinical Pharmacy
– Volume 1, Issue 1  January 2009

Editor's Comments
  The start of something big
   
News
  ADRs more common with comorbid disease
  Rituximab re-treatment unsuccessful for initial non-responders



   
Opinion
  Why pharmacy would be lost without a clinical role
Philip Brown, publisher of The British Journal of Clinical Pharmacy, shares his views on the public perception of pharmacy, where it went wrong, and what is required from the new professional body to salvage our profession.
   
Feature
  Top-up payments – what clinical pharmacists should expect
The dust is beginning to settle on the new ruling that patients can pay for private treatment while continuing to receive NHS care. But exactly what costs will they have to meet? And what role do clinical pharmacists have in providing advice to private patients? Steve Williamson explains.
   
Clinical update

More cancer drugs may be approved this year
NICE has changed the way it assesses life-extending treatments for rarer diseases. This is likely to increase the number of therapies approved for use on the NHS. Anne Hines looks at which cancer drugs this is likely to involve, and considers the practical implications of the changes.

New cardiology drugs to impact on therapy this year

Two new drug launches are expected to impact on cardiology therapy this year. Helen Williams describes the evidence behind them and their likely effect on practice.


New antibiotics in the pipeline

Antibiotics are not just the responsibility of infectious diseases pharmacists. Tracy Lyons and Hayley Wickens outline the drugs that all pharmacists should look out for this year.

   
Head-to-head
  Will consultant pharmacist status hinder the recruitment of pharmacy directors? Chris Green and John Quinn debate.
   
Safety
  Medicines reconciliation on admission – don’t forget the children
National guidance states that medicines reconciliation should be carried out for all adults admitted to hospital, but excludes children. A team from Birmingham Children’s Hospital has conducted a study to determine the clinical significance of not conducting medicines reconciliation when children are admitted to hospital. By David Terry, Guirish Solanki, Anthony Sinclair, John Marriott and Keith Wilson.
   
Prescriber’s Corner
  Prescriber’s Corner sets out real situations encountered by pharmacist prescribers and invites you to consider what action you would take. In this case, a cardiac patient with severe breathlessness presents to a heart failure clinic.
   
Sharing practice

Outsourcing dispensing saves time and money. Outsourcing the dispensing of selected outpatient prescriptions at the Royal Liverpool and Broadgreen University Hospitals NHS Trust is showing early benefits to both patients and the trust. Alison Ewing, clinical director of pharmacy at the trust, outlines how.

Improving opioid records

Lack of information about a patient’s opioid history is a recognised risk to the prescribing, dispensing and administration of these drugs. To address this problem, a team from Birmingham is piloting a new record system which they hope will become the national standard. By Abi Jenkins and Michelle Aslett.

   
Interview
  Last month Martin Stephens took up a new post at the Department of Health – national clinical director with responsibility for hospital pharmacy. He tells The British Journal of Clinical Pharmacy about his plans.
   
Continuing Professional Development
  Delegates packed the venue to hear a group of pharmacy leadership coaches give a motivational talk at the recent American Society of Health-System Pharmacists mid-year clinical meeting held in Orlando, Florida. The theme was achieving excellence and influencing change. This article brings you the key messages from the session, and prompts you to put some of the theories into action.
   
The British Journal of Clinical Pharmacy is an editorially independent publication.
Copyright of the The British Journal of Clinical Pharmacy. No reproduction in any format is allowed unless permission is granted by the publisher.