From the Grand Falls Windsor (NL) Advertiser:
When Grand Falls-Windsor pharmacist Sandra Carey was reappointed in May to be the returning president of the national pharmacy board, an overseas trip wasn't the first thing on her mind.
But shortly after that, Ms. Carey, who works at the Wal-Mart pharmacy, found herself going to Geneva, Switzerland, at the European headquarters of the United Nations.
She represented the National Association of Pharmacy Regulatory Authorities (NAPRA) at the International Conference for Health Care Professionals, where people in the field from all over the world met to discuss a topic that Newfoundlanders, and the central region in particular, can relate to: a global health care crisis.
"The world is becoming smaller," said Ms. Carey. "People in developing countries are hearing that there's good money to be made in Canada and the U.S. and they're finding that there's a major shift. This is creating a crisis in these developing countries because there are not enough people to look after the people there.
While doctor and nurse shortages are a common topic in this province as well as on a global level, that list includes pharmacists as well. ...more
Showing posts with label Newfoundland. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Newfoundland. Show all posts
Sunday, June 29, 2008
Friday, April 11, 2008
NDP questions Williams over PR role in cancer drug approval
From CBC News:
Newfoundland and Labrador's governing Tories were focused on public relations, not just health, while approving a new cancer drug, the New Democratic Party says.
In October 2005, then Health Minister John Ottenheimer solicited cabinet support for subsidizing Herceptin, an expensive but effective drug offered to breast cancer patients in the early stages of the disease.
The briefing document, which has been tabled as an exhibit at the judicial inquiry now examining how a St. John's pathology lab produced hundreds of inaccurate hormone receptor test results, included arguments in favour of approving the drug. ...more
Newfoundland and Labrador's governing Tories were focused on public relations, not just health, while approving a new cancer drug, the New Democratic Party says.
In October 2005, then Health Minister John Ottenheimer solicited cabinet support for subsidizing Herceptin, an expensive but effective drug offered to breast cancer patients in the early stages of the disease.
The briefing document, which has been tabled as an exhibit at the judicial inquiry now examining how a St. John's pathology lab produced hundreds of inaccurate hormone receptor test results, included arguments in favour of approving the drug. ...more
Labels:
Herceptin,
Newfoundland
Wednesday, December 19, 2007
Doctors warn of potential dangers of OxyContin
From CTV News:
Canadian physicians are warning of the potential dangers of the prescription painkiller OxyContin following a high-profile case in which a Newfoundland and Labrador doctor was convicted of trafficking the potentially addictive narcotic.
On Monday, Dr. Sean Buckingham was convicted of five counts of sexual assault, six counts of trafficking painkillers such as OxyContin and lorazepam (sold under the name Ativan), and one count of assault.
Witnesses testified during the two-month trial that Buckingham provided them with drugs in exchange for money and sexual favours over a two-year period. ...more
Canadian physicians are warning of the potential dangers of the prescription painkiller OxyContin following a high-profile case in which a Newfoundland and Labrador doctor was convicted of trafficking the potentially addictive narcotic.
On Monday, Dr. Sean Buckingham was convicted of five counts of sexual assault, six counts of trafficking painkillers such as OxyContin and lorazepam (sold under the name Ativan), and one count of assault.
Witnesses testified during the two-month trial that Buckingham provided them with drugs in exchange for money and sexual favours over a two-year period. ...more
Labels:
drug abuse,
Newfoundland,
oxycodone,
Oxycontin
Monday, December 17, 2007
Pharmacists face dilemma over dispensing narcotics: provincial board
From the (Corner Brook, NF) Western Star:
Pharmacists in this province are finding themselves in a dilemma over dispensing narcotics like OxyContin, the Newfoundland and Labrador Pharmacy Board says.
"The dilemma is you don't want to be sucked in by people abusing it," said Don Rowe, secretary-registrar of the board. "You always have to be vigilant looking for potential abuse or signs of it, but at the same time not making a legitimate customer feel like some kind of a criminal just because they have been prescribed a drug like OxyContin or Percocet or whatever."
The "sucking in" hasn't always come from only patients, as the recent conviction of St. John's physician Dr. Sean Buckingham made evident. Last week, Buckingham was convicted of 12 counts of sexual assault, assault and drug trafficking in Newfoundland Supreme Court. Buckingham, who ran a practice on Queen's Road, was found guilty of having provided several former patients with prescription drugs, including OxyContin and Ativan, in return for sexual favours....more
Pharmacists in this province are finding themselves in a dilemma over dispensing narcotics like OxyContin, the Newfoundland and Labrador Pharmacy Board says.
"The dilemma is you don't want to be sucked in by people abusing it," said Don Rowe, secretary-registrar of the board. "You always have to be vigilant looking for potential abuse or signs of it, but at the same time not making a legitimate customer feel like some kind of a criminal just because they have been prescribed a drug like OxyContin or Percocet or whatever."
The "sucking in" hasn't always come from only patients, as the recent conviction of St. John's physician Dr. Sean Buckingham made evident. Last week, Buckingham was convicted of 12 counts of sexual assault, assault and drug trafficking in Newfoundland Supreme Court. Buckingham, who ran a practice on Queen's Road, was found guilty of having provided several former patients with prescription drugs, including OxyContin and Ativan, in return for sexual favours....more
Labels:
drug abuse,
Newfoundland,
Oxycontin
Wednesday, November 07, 2007
Sex & drugs case hurts pain care: MDs
From the National Review of Medicine:
Whether St John's, NL, family physician Dr Sean Buckingham gave drug addicts opioid prescriptions in exchange for sex is for the jury in his ongoing trial to decide. But pain care physicians from across Newfoundland and Canada fear his alleged crimes have already done their damage by making MDs too afraid to prescribe strong pain meds.
Dr Buckingham was first arrested in May 2005 after a long-running investigation by police that involved wire-tapping, raids and 24-hour surveillance, called Operation Remedy. He is currently facing 23 charges, ranging from drug trafficking to sexual assault. During the last week of October, the jury heard shocking testimony from three women who allege they had sex with Dr Buckingham in exchange for prescriptions for opioids painkillers. ...more
Whether St John's, NL, family physician Dr Sean Buckingham gave drug addicts opioid prescriptions in exchange for sex is for the jury in his ongoing trial to decide. But pain care physicians from across Newfoundland and Canada fear his alleged crimes have already done their damage by making MDs too afraid to prescribe strong pain meds.
Dr Buckingham was first arrested in May 2005 after a long-running investigation by police that involved wire-tapping, raids and 24-hour surveillance, called Operation Remedy. He is currently facing 23 charges, ranging from drug trafficking to sexual assault. During the last week of October, the jury heard shocking testimony from three women who allege they had sex with Dr Buckingham in exchange for prescriptions for opioids painkillers. ...more
Labels:
drug abuse,
Newfoundland,
oxycodone,
Oxycontin
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