RECENT NEWS

Fears over funding of junior doctor training

The British Medical Association’s Junior Doctor Committee has called on the Department of Health to halt its review of training funding, as it threatens to cut millions of pounds from junior doctor training.

Regional trauma centres could halve deaths

The Royal College of Surgeons (RCS) has announced the publication of a detailed plan to assist Strategic Health Authorities in developing regional trauma systems across the country. The guidance maps out what is required in terms of equipment, staff, space and experience for centres designated as major trauma centres and trauma units (which will look after patients with less severe injuries), tracking the patient from the first pre-hospital clinical contact following injury right through to rehabilitation.

Calls for minimum pricing for alcohol

Deaths from liver disease are increasing at an alarming rate and, by 2030, will exceed those from cardiac deaths, warned Kevin Moore, professor of hepatology at University College London, and Nick Sheron, consultant hepatologist at Southampton General Hospital.

Calls to screen heart patients for COPD

Over a quarter of people with heart disease may also be living with chronic lung disease without knowing it, according to new research presented at The British Thoracic Society (BTS) Annual Winter Meeting. The researchers believe that if heart patients were screened, and lung disease was spotted earlier and treated, it could help to improve health outcomes.

Link between infections and cancer highlighted

“Cancer can be prevented too”’ is the theme of a new campaign being launched in the lead up to World Cancer Day on 4 February, by the International Union Against Cancer (UICC). The campaign is backed by a new scientific report: “Protection against cancer causing infections” which focuses on the nine infections that can lead to cancer.

Warning over social networking sites

Doctors are being warned not to respond to amorous approaches from patients on social networking sites like Facebook, by the Medical Defence Union (MDU). Whatever the implicit social rules of such sites, the MDU said it would be wholly inappropriate to respond to a patient making advances in this way.

Ten point plan for avoiding drug errors

Following the publication of the GMC’s study into prescribing errors in hospital, which revealed that mistakes could be made by doctors at all levels, the Medical Defence Union (MDU) has published tips to help doctors avoid the most common problems.

Research compares ulcer dressings

There is no “clinical” difference when comparing dressings for treating chronic diabetic foot ulcers, according to new research published by the National Institute for Health Research Health Technology Assessment (NIHR, HTA) programme.

New insight into ‘bird flu’

Bird flu viruses would have to make at least two simultaneous genetic mutations before they could be transmitted readily from human to human, according to research published in PLoS ONE.

Experts call for more lung cancer nurses

Lung cancer specialist nurses across the UK are calling on the Government to standby its commitment to specialist nurses, in order to ensure that every lung cancer patient has access to a lung cancer nurse. “

Concerns over variation in cancer treatment access

The proportion of lung cancer patients getting active treatment varies widely from place to place, according to the latest National Lung Cancer Audit.

Guidance on blood clot treatment

NICE has published final guidance recommending the use of prasugrel in combination with aspirin as an option for preventing blood clots in the arteries of people with acute coronary syndromes.

UK first for London Chest Hospital

The London Chest Hospital, part of Barts and The London NHS Trust, has installed the first Siemens Somatom Definition Flash CT system in the UK for fast CT speed combined with low radiation dose.

Early cooling improves cardiac arrest survival

Scientists in Europe have shown that the survival chances of a person in cardiac arrest may be improved by lowering their body temperature early on during their treatment.

Dementia care in hospitals criticised

People with dementia are staying far longer in hospital than people without the condition that go in for the same treatment at a cost of hundreds of millions of pounds to the NHS.

UCH rolls out faster radiotherapy treatment

Two female brain tumor patients at University College Hospital (UCH) have become the first people in the south of England to be treated using a faster form of radiotherapy.

Graduates flock to healthcare

As the unemployment prospects for university leavers have seen a year-on-year increase of 44%, rising to a highest level in 12 years, graduates are fast turning to the health sector for work reveals a study by the Higher Education Careers Services Unit (HECSU).

NICE to evaluate medical technologies

NICE has announced a new programme dedicated to the evaluation of innovative medical technologies (including devices and diagnostics).

Caesarean rates vary

Babies born in Chelsea and Westminster NHS Trust are about twice as likely to have been delivered by Caesarean section as those born in Sherwood Hospital in Nottingham, a report from The NHS Information Centre has revealed.

Steris awarded biodecontamination contract

The NHS Purchasing and Supply Agency (PASA) has awarded Steris with a contract to supply vaporised hydrogen peroxide (VHP) systems to hospitals in England.

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