Greg Hunt warns pharmacists and doctors on medicine information


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She said many CMIs, which could run into seven pages, were too long and complicated, making patients unlikely to read them even if they were provided in paper form.


Communication Research Institute chief executive David Sless agreed, saying the documents did not “invite reading”.


Professor Sless, who worked on the design of CMIs in the 1990s, said Australia had once led the world in medicine communications but had “gone to the back of the class”, with the documents “designed for something that is basically one up from a typewriter”.


“It’s a bit of a national disgrace,” he said.


Australian Medical Association president Tony Bartone said CMIs were “too dense, too confusing, too non-user-friendly”.


Article source: https://hollywoodlife.com/2018/12/19/stars-who-used-fame-for-good-2018-pics-eg18/

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