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This is a text for practicing pharmacists on the understanding,
management and treatment of Obesity. Obesity is an important risk
factor for a number of chronic conditions such as heart disease,
stroke, some cancers and type two diabetes. It is responsible for
more than 9000 premature deaths a year in England alone and is a
growing problem both among adults and children especially in the UK
and USA. Community pharmacists now have an increasingly important
role in public health. The increased health promotion
responsibility under the new contract in the UK and improved
consultation facilities now available means that a book such as
this is very timely. This text focuses on pharmacists care with the
first part concentrating on the background and epidemiology of the
problem, the current rates of obesity and the facts, also linking
obesity with the emergence of potential public health crisis. Part
two of the text focuses on the prevention of obesity including
prevention on government level, psychological intervention and
exercise and nutrition. The chapters then go on to include the
pharmacological interventions including drugs available and also
surgical interventions and diets. The closing chapter looks at the
structure of the evolving services from community pharmacy
nationally and internationally.
***A Waterstones Best Books of 2022 pick*** 'David Haslam is
uniquely placed to reflect on how healthcare has lost its way, what
needs to be done to fix it and why all of us are responsible for
doing so... The importance and timeliness of his messages shines
through.' Dr Phil Hammond 'A fascinating and important book.' Dr
Amanda Brown With a single drug in the UK currently costing
£340,000 per patient per year, or a gene therapy in the USA being
costed at $1.2million, who should get such treatments, and how can
we begin to afford them? Should we all be entitled to timely mental
health therapy? How should we care for our old? As we grapple with
the world's worst pandemic for a century, our minds are on our
health more than ever. But what should we rightfully expect of
doctors? In this original and thought-provoking book, Sir David
Haslam explores what good healthcare should achieve and asks how we
pay for it. Informed by patient stories and data from across the
world - from US big pharma to Britain's NHS - this is an urgent and
often moving examination of our most important asset: our health.
***A Waterstones Best Books of 2022 pick*** 'David Haslam is
uniquely placed to reflect on how healthcare has lost its way, what
needs to be done to fix it and why all of us are responsible for
doing so... The importance and timeliness of his messages shines
through.' Dr Phil Hammond 'A fascinating and important book.' Dr
Amanda Brown With a single drug in the UK currently costing
GBP340,000 per patient per year, or a gene therapy in the USA being
costed at $1.2million, who should get such treatments, and how can
we begin to afford them? Should we all be entitled to timely mental
health therapy? How should we care for our old? As we grapple with
the world's worst pandemic for a century, our minds are on our
health more than ever. But what should we rightfully expect of
doctors? In this original and thought-provoking book, Sir David
Haslam explores what good healthcare should achieve and asks how we
pay for it. Informed by patient stories and data from across the
world - from US big pharma to Britain's NHS - this is an urgent and
often moving examination of our most important asset: our health.
Established as the first guide to stress written specifically by
GPs for GPs this new edition has been completely revised and
up-dated. The first edition was published privately and its success
created a demand for it to be more widely available. With
contributions from a range of eminent GPs this book has a personal
and reflective approach that gives practical and 'tried and tested'
advice for busy practitioners. It explores the causes of stress
with case histories and details of specific problems that relate to
the increasing pressures put on primary care teams. Illustrated
throughout with cartoons by Martin Davies the book is easy to read
from cover to cover and can be dipped into and used for reference
as required.
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