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Palliative Care in Community Pharmacy Education Day
All material was delivered in August 2024- the PHN recommends information be checked for currency before use in practice. The material content has not been updated since its delivery.
Sessions:
The Palliative and End of Life Care Framework Dr Greg Parker, Director, PallConsult (Video) (Presentation)
The role of community pharmacy in palliative care Charlotte Ewer, Business Support Pharmacist, The Pharmacy Guild of Australia (Video) (Presentation)
Consumer voice: How palliative care found me Leah Robinson (Video) (Presentation)
Palliative medicines: Core medicines, common drugs, and symptom management Kathy Hurree, Senior Pharmacist- Palliative Care, Metro North HHS (Video) (Presentation)
Operational consideration in community pharmacy Carolyn Clementson, Pharmacy Manager, Good Price Pharmacy Warehouse (Video) (Presentation)
Palliative Friendly Pharmacies: Finding local pharmacies. Caroline Irle, Project Lead, Brisbane North PHN (Video) (Presentation)
Voluntary Assisted Dying pharmacy education Elisha Cole, Assistant Director of Pharmacy, Queensland Voluntary Assisted Dying Support and Pharmacy Service (Video) (Presentation)
Spirituality in palliative care Dr Sue Colen, General Practitioner with Special Interest- Palliative Care. (Video) (Presentation)
Support for pharmacists Megan Tremlett, Senior Pharmacist- Consulting, Pharmaceutical Society of Australia (Video) (Presentation)
Strengthening the service: The impacts of embedding a pharmacist in paediatric palliative hospice Penny Liddell, Clinical Pharmacist, Hummingbird House (Video) (Presentation)
Panel Discussion Moderator: Andrea Coe with Panel: Elisha Cole, Megan Tremlett, Penny Liddell, Sue Colen (Video)
All material was delivered in August 2024- the PHN recommends information be checked for currency before use in practice. The material content has not been updated since its delivery.
Sessions:
The Palliative and End of Life Care Framework Dr Greg Parker, Director, PallConsult (Video) (Presentation)
The role of community pharmacy in palliative care Charlotte Ewer, Business Support Pharmacist, The Pharmacy Guild of Australia (Video) (Presentation)
Consumer voice: How palliative care found me Leah Robinson (Video) (Presentation)
Palliative medicines: Core medicines, common drugs, and symptom management Kathy Hurree, Senior Pharmacist- Palliative Care, Metro North HHS (Video) (Presentation)
Operational consideration in community pharmacy Carolyn Clementson, Pharmacy Manager, Good Price Pharmacy Warehouse (Video) (Presentation)
Palliative Friendly Pharmacies: Finding local pharmacies. Caroline Irle, Project Lead, Brisbane North PHN (Video) (Presentation)
Voluntary Assisted Dying pharmacy education Elisha Cole, Assistant Director of Pharmacy, Queensland Voluntary Assisted Dying Support and Pharmacy Service (Video) (Presentation)
Spirituality in palliative care Dr Sue Colen, General Practitioner with Special Interest- Palliative Care. (Video) (Presentation)
Support for pharmacists Megan Tremlett, Senior Pharmacist- Consulting, Pharmaceutical Society of Australia (Video) (Presentation)
Strengthening the service: The impacts of embedding a pharmacist in paediatric palliative hospice Penny Liddell, Clinical Pharmacist, Hummingbird House (Video) (Presentation)
Panel Discussion Moderator: Andrea Coe with Panel: Elisha Cole, Megan Tremlett, Penny Liddell, Sue Colen (Video)
Are you willing to share your experience in supporting palliative care to help others?
If you are interested in playing an active role in future palliative care education and networking events, please let us know via this EOI form. Alternatively, you can email community.care@brisbanenorthphn.org.au.
Honorariums are offered as a token of appreciation for involvement. Exact time commitment would depend of type/level of involvement. More information would be provided during discussions after expression of interest (EOI) submitted.
This assessment is for attendees which to gain a certificate of completion for this activity (Required to claim CPD Group 2 points). To undertake this assessment, you need to be logged in to MyVoice (Login or sign up here)
A copy of your responses will be emailed to you upon submission. Marking is completed manually. The required correct response rate to pass is 75%. A maximum of two attempts are allowed. You will be notified by email of the outcome within 72hours.
CLOSED: This survey closed 14 August. If you have feedback to share, please email Community.care@brisbanenorthphn.org.au.
Thank you for attending the Palliative Care in Community Pharmacy Education Day on Wednesday 31 July 2024. Please share your thoughts with us through this evaluation survey. Your valuable feedback will help us plan future events and activities.
You may choose to complete this survey online or in hardcopy. Hardcopy versions will be distributed at the event.
(Note: the wording of this survey has been dictated by an external consultant on behalf of the Department of Health and Aged Care. If you are unsure of any item, please go with what you think the question is asking)
The Death Literacy Index is a population based tool measuring people’s knowledge and skills that allow them to make active choices around end of life options, and understanding what contributes to people’s level of death literacy. The shortened 29 question form is estimated to take 3-5 minutes. All responses are anonymous, and results are examined as a group (not at the individual level). Results will help inform strengths, opportunities for improvements, key learnings, and standpoint against the Australian average.Participation is voluntary and you may withdraw at any point. You participation is greatly appreciated.
(Note: the wording of this survey has been dictated by an external consultant on behalf of the Department of Health and Aged Care. If you are unsure of any item, please go with what you think the question is asking)
The Death Literacy Index is a population based tool measuring people’s knowledge and skills that allow them to make active choices around end of life options, and understanding what contributes to people’s level of death literacy. The shortened 29 question form is estimated to take 3-5 minutes. And includes 6 sections of scaled questions. All responses are anonymous, and results are examined as a group (not at the individual level). Results will help inform strengths, opportunities for improvements, key learnings, and standpoint against the Australian average. Participation is voluntary and you may withdraw at any point. You participation is greatly appreciated.