Health promotion activity in community pharmacies was studied along with pharmacists' perceptions of the barriers and constraints to increasing health promotion activity within community pharmacy. A stratified sample (of 30 pharmacists) was investigated using a structured interview in the spring of 1993. Health promotion activities were undertaken by all study pharmacies. The number of times advice was given and/or a query dealt with was estimated to be around 1400 per week for the sample. It was found that the activity was 2.5 times more likely to be reactive rather than proactive. In general pharmacists felt isolated and excluded from formal activity: five pharmacists felt that they had enough support from local health promotion units and only one pharmacist had any liaison with a unit. There was evidence to suggest that these community pharmacies were an under-utilised resource for health promotion.
In a time of fraying community and interpersonal relationships, rural school and community leaders are in search of research-based approaches to strengthen connections and sustain relationships among their students and community members. This article reports the findings from two studies (Moore, 2023; Weikert, 2022) documenting how and why, during the height of the pandemic, rural leaders from a community museum and local school came together to use local history and knowledge to design a museum exhibit and a K-12 curriculum about the pandemic and vaccines. The article describes the museum’s place-conscious development process of the exhibit titled, Shots Felt Round the World: Dr. Maurice Hilleman and the Montana Origins of the Fight Against Pandemics to invite visitors to view the COVID-19 pandemic and vaccine development through local histories of infectious disease and healthcare. The article also describes how a curriculum for students in kindergarten through 12th grade (K-12) titled, Hilleman & Vaccines: Connecting Culture to Scientific Curiosity was created in tandem with the exhibition by the museum’s Teacher Advisory Council to connect students to local history and knowledge to promote student learning through the integration of math, science, history, and critical thinking. Findings reveal that while the subject of vaccines is politically charged, the emphasis on local history and knowledge allowed both museum and K-12 audiences to find common ground, learn about the subject through a local lens, and strengthen school and community-school connections. The article concludes with recommendations for how rural schools and communities can use local knowledge to contribute to cross-community connections and vitality.
LETTERS script. . . . The director cut about half of the first act after opening night, totally emasculating the script and destroying continuity to such an extent that the seconti and third night audiences could understand nothing of what was happening. He also had the playwright understand that he (the playwright) should get lost during rehearsals. Is this what Mr. Colucci wishes on Mr. Lineberger?
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