The community pharmacist has direct contact with patients and is often the first link in the health service to which patients go. We can play a vitally important role in health education, trying to improve the quality of life of patients who are becoming ill at an increasingly younger age. The figures for overweight and obesity, depression and addictions are increasingly alarming. This book shows the involvement of the community pharmacist in the health education of the juvenile infant population in coordination with the Department of Education.