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Health drive up in smoke as pharmacy scheme hits snags

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Published Date: 22 June 2009
A STRATEGY to give quitting smokers one-to-one help through pharmacies has been hit after it emerged the service is well behind schedule on its targets.
Health chiefs hoped to move much of the smoking cessation services into pharmacies to make it more accessible for smokers and to ease the strain on GPs.

They wanted 40 per cent of successful quits to be made through the Lothians' pharmacies, but l
atest statistics have shown this is currently only at 8 per cent.

The health board has now vowed to provide extra training for staff in a bid to up the figures as it attempts to convince 11,000 people in the Lothians to quit over the next two years.

Presenting the findings to NHS Lothian board members, lead officers Mike Massarro-Mallinson and Fiona Hume explained that the switch had so far not reached expectations.

They said: "It had been anticipated that pharmacies would deliver 40 per cent of the target; to date they have only contributed 8 per cent of successful outcomes achieved.

"Additional training is being provided for community pharmacy staff to improve their skills in smoking cessation support.

"There is also a significant advertising campaign signposting the pharmacy scheme underway."

The Evening News revealed in January how 180 community pharmacies would begin to take on smokers from the area's doctors.

Pharmacists draw up a 12-week action plan following an interview with the patient, and also have options which include prescribing nicotine replacement therapy, and referring people onto specialist NHS services for additional support.

The idea was designed to target busy people who felt that they did not have time to go into a GP surgery, but might be able to pop in to their high street pharmacy.

NHS Scotland recently instructed local health chiefs to get 11,000 successful quitters by 2011. As a result, a series of measures has been outlined to make it happen, such as one-to-one help for those quitters who are a month into kicking their habit, whereas previously many were left to fend for themselves at a time experts identify as key.

And despite the poor return from pharmacies, 44 per cent more people did attempt to stop smoking in the Lothians last year than in 2007 with the help of medics.

A pilot scheme is also ongoing which sees city chemists offer impromptu check-ups for harassed commuters, one of many additional powers that have been given to pharmacies in the past few years.

That was led to a swell in pharmacy applications in the city, with 20 new ones going in over the past two years.





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  • Last Updated: 22 June 2009 10:10 AM
  • Source: Edinburgh Evening News
  • Location: Edinburgh
  • Related Topics: Health of the NHS
 
1

Alternative (High-Octane) Fuel Head,

Edinburgh 22/06/2009 12:21:52
Ditch this now.

If people want to smoke, let them smoke. They have paid for that right.
2

Bill MacD,

22/06/2009 13:29:03
Typical of the horrible FuelHead to side with idiots who want to destroy everyone else's environment. You'd never have guessed he'd side with the selfish, would you?
3

Billy Bob Jnr,

22/06/2009 13:58:28
#1 This is for helping people who want help quiting. They are not forcing anybody to do anything they don't want to.

4

Alternative (High-Octane) Fuel Head,

Edinburgh 22/06/2009 14:05:54
#3:

The issue I have is that public money---ie, your money and my money---is being used in support of a program of propaganda and lies.

The NHS is also acting as a vehicle for Big Pharma to sell more of their useless products, some of which are a great deal worse for you than tobacco smoke. It is even more galling when these products are subsidised or paid for outright by the taxpayer.

If people are so taken in by all this bunkum that they want to quite smoking, they should start acting like adults and just get on with it and do it. If someone REALLY wants to quit they will just quit. I've known several quite heavy smokers who did this so I know it can be done.

If you want to quit smoking then for christs sake just do it. I do not wish to know about it and I do not expect to have to pay for "medication" to "help" you to do so.
5

Alternative (High-Octane) Fuel Head,

Edinburgh 22/06/2009 14:08:57
Oh I'm "horrible" now am I Bill?

Excuse me while I run away in tears and hide under the table....
6

Statsman,

Edinburgh 22/06/2009 14:12:22
3 Billy Bob Jnr

Wrong. It can just be people enquiring about it. This is the problem with targets.
7

Stuart Holmes. Anti smoking campaigner,

London/Manchester 22/06/2009 15:07:39
As tobacco is a lethal addictive drug, would it not make sense to restrict the sale of it to chemists only where it could be regulated into extinction? It is forecast by the World Health Organisation that smoking will kill One Billion people this century that’s 1/6 of the world’s population! Stuart Holmes. Anti-smoking campaigner. www.ActorsSmokingFilmsTV.blogspot.com
8

Alternative (High-Octane) Fuel Head,

Edinburgh 22/06/2009 15:19:46
#7:

And what book of fairy stories have you been reading?
9

gordon aka smoker and proud,

edinburgh 22/06/2009 15:25:59
yet again more excuses for a law that is sheer madness, if i want to smoke I WILL! they eejits in parialment come up with things that ulitamtely costs the tax payer more money, take today for instance, theres a summit to tackle alcohol problems in our youth and on the agenda is raising the prices or stopping under 21's drinking!!!!! eh?????? i started drinking when i was 16 in a pub and i was able to drink sensibly! and that was many years ago! so raise the age why dont you! brainwave move! what i suggest is that politicians sit and discuss something sensible like how do we stop politicians robbing the electorate and saying sorry and paying a pitance back will not be accepted, send the gits down! same with yobs who drink too much and cant behave, people who smoke dont cause mayhem in the streets or in pubs etc! its politicians who are causing grief with their lies and theft and scheming! prosecute them make them pay all monies back, in reality they should be doing their jobs for the benefit of the electorate for free as a part time, in their own time sorta thing and if they wish to pass laws then they have to get the electorates backing in major votes, not their opinion! no one has EVER EVER had the words passive smoking or death by smoke inhalation inserted on their death certificate, why? because it CANNOT BE PROVEN! it is a factor but so is carbon emissions from cars, eating the wrong foodstuffs etc etc etc. if only common sence had prevailed at the outset with the ban then maybe all this hooha could have been avoided.we cant trust or depend on our politicians so why do we sit back and let them walk all over us? i am not saying for 1 second that smoking should be brought back into all pubs but what i am saying is, if their is food served or children allowed in the premises then ban it! i do not have a problem with that, but a (i will use the terminology of the past) working mans pub with no food and adequate ventilation, why ban it? if you are a non smoker then y
10

gordon aka smoker and proud,

edinburgh 22/06/2009 15:29:09
oh and #7.
rather than telling us about how many smokers are goping to die, show us the absolute medical facts, ie show us how mwny people have death by smoking on their death certs or death by passive smoking or words to t hat effect. no you cant I KNOW THAT so go back to your rabbit hole and stay there, come back when you understand that people have RIGHT to decide, no be dictated to by eejits and morons like you.
11

Leila,

Edinburgh 22/06/2009 16:12:39
I agree with #4. Most people who decide they need to stop smoking just get on and do it by themselves (that's how I did it). And you don't have to go to a pharmacist to get nicotine replacement products - any supermarket sells them. The article implies that no one can possibly stop smoking without assistance (and lots of public money), which is nonsense.
12

gordon aka smoker and proud,

edinburgh 22/06/2009 16:32:09
#11
i totally agree, its called freedom of choice and as you have done will power,determination and a mind to stop. well done.
13

sazm,

edinburgh 22/06/2009 17:08:54
#4 People are NOT getting this for free, they are having to pay a prescription charge which means it's making it a bit cheaper than buying patches etc normally, therefor helping people cut down or stop which i'm happy about as personally hate smoking!
As for the scheme not reaching its targets, i work in a pharmacy that runs this scheme and after the first few weeks, people where just not coming back for more as prefer their fags. Cant force them in to collect them so obviously they prefer to spend a fiver per pack of 20.
14

Alternative (High-Octane) Fuel Head,

Edinburgh 22/06/2009 17:29:31
#13:

Have you seen the price of the drugs in question? A month's supply of them would certainly come in at far, far more than the prescription charge---and I would imagine that they would be prescribed in amounts that would normally constitute a months supply.

Additionally, they are offering 1-to-1 councilling for smokers. That kind of thing doesn't come cheap. There is a hell of a lot of money being spent on this. It runs into eight figures if you are interested... TV propaganda adverts, leaflets, pamphlets, flyers, posters, point of sale material, not to mention the drugs themselves and NHS staff time. It all adds up you know.
15

Alternative (High-Octane) Fuel Head,

Edinburgh 22/06/2009 17:32:23
It wouldn't be so bad if these drugs actually worked but by their own admission they do not. Look on the packet of any of them and you will see something along the lines of "willpower required" printed on the side.

When it all boils down, willpower is the ONLY thing required. These patches etc would be of more use if you packed them into a pipe and smoked the damn things.
16

The real dracula,

22/06/2009 19:45:27
Funny the amount of people moanng about smokers when in fact problem drinking is a bigger social and health problem.
The side effects of drinkers are more of a health problem than the odd smoker (BTW you can move f you are next to a smoker , you dont have to stand/sit next to them). You cant always predict if some drunk tvvat bottles or glasses your face on a night out!!!!

Far more money is spent on the affects of problem drinking than it is on smoking
17

sazm,

edinburgh 23/06/2009 21:17:08
Do u actually work at any point each day? Don't understand where you find the time to look up all these facts (most uninteresting), respond to every post and hold down a job
18

sazm,

23/06/2009 21:17:43
Sorry, ment for fuel head btw

 

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