Pharmacy care programs for elderly improve health outcomes
14th Nov 2006, 15:26 GMT
A pharmacy care program for elderly patients increases medication adherence, which results in improved health outcomes, according to a study posted online by JAMA: The Journal of the American Medical Association. The study is being released early to coincide with its presentation at the American Heart Association Scientific Session. It will be published in the December 6 print issue of JAMA.
Pharmacy care programs for elderly improve health outcomes related news:
- Pharmacy care programs for elderly improve health outcomes — News-Medical News Feed
- Pharmacy care program helps elderly patients take all their medications — EurekAlert! - Social and Behavioral Science
- Pharmacy Program Helps Elderly Take Their Meds — WOODTV - Health
- Pharmacy Program Helps Elderly Take Their Meds (HealthDay) — Yahoo! News: Health News
- Funds to boost care for elderly — BBC News | Health | UK Edition
- Disease Management Programs Can Help Improve the Health of Medicaid Patients Through Improved Care Coordination While Helping To Control Medicaid Costs — RedOrbit News - Health
- New Statistical Approach Could Improve Hospital Care For Sick Newborns — Health News from Medical News Today
- AIAG Conference Explores Applying Automotive Quality Methodologies to Reduce Medical Errors, Improve Health Care Delivery and Reduce Costs — Pharmaceuticals News from StratCenter.com
- Study says, Late-life pregnancies risky, but birth outcomes are good — KeralaNext: Health
- Elderly health scheme criticised — BBC News | UK | UK Edition
Latest news from Medical and health information and tools from Armenian Medical Network:
- Mobile Robots Offer 24/7 Care to Neurosurgical ICU, Stroke Patients
- How Diet, Obesity and Even Gum Disease May Affect Immune System
- New Guideline for the Diagnostic Assessment of Children with Continuous Seizures
- EU wants safer cigarettes to reduce fires
- More U.S residents trust TV for health inf
- Scientists use pixels to ease amputees' pain
- Tamiflu label will carry new caution in U.S.
- Dad's vocabulary affects child's language skills
- Chocolate 'Offenders' Teach Science a Sweet Lesson
- New study finds on/off switch for septic shock