RECENT NEWS
Capital’s health challenges in focus
London Health 2010,a one-day management conference aimed at CEOs, senior management personnel, and directors in the health service, being held on 3 November, 2010 at the capital’s Business Design Centre, will include a keynote speech by current Health Minister, the Rt. Hon Andrew Lansley CBE MP.
Cancer survival rate doubles
People diagnosed with breast, bowel and ovarian cancers and non-Hodgkin’s lymphoma are today twice as likely to survive for at least 10 years as those diagnosed in the early 1970s according to new figures released by Cancer Research UK.
RCN warns of job cuts
Almost 10,000 NHS posts in England, the equivalent of a large teaching hospital, have been earmarked for cuts, the Royal College of Nursing has revealed. The figure contradicts the assertion that frontline services will be protected.
Cancer centre to develop pioneering treatments
A new cutting-edge cancer centre dedicated to robotic surgery, cancer imaging and drug discovery has been launched in London.
Mortality higher for out-of-hours births
Babies born at night or at the weekend are at greater risk of dying due to lack of oxygen (anoxia) than those born during normal working hours, Cambridge researchers have found.
Scotland introduces Wii-style pain relief
A new pain relief implant using Wii-style technology for people with chronic nerve pain has been used in Scotland for the first time. NHS Greater Glasgow and Clyde’s Dr Gordon McGinn fitted the new “neurostimulator implant” under local anaesthetic at Glasgow’s New Victoria Hospital.
UK lags behind in MS drug prescription
A report has named the UK as one of the worst developed countries in the world in terms of access to MS drugs – prompting the MS Society to call for an urgent update of the clinical guidelines for MS.
Investigation highlights failings in out-of-hours care
The Care Quality Commission (CQC) has published its report into the GP out-of-hours provider, Take Care Now (TCN). The regulator’s investigation was triggered by the case of Mr David Gray, a patient killed by an overdose of 100 mg diamorphine in February 2008.
NHS reorganisation is ‘waste of money’ says think tank
David Furness, the author of the Social Market Foundation’s major health report, has described Government’s plans to transfer billions of pounds from Primary Care Trusts (PCTs) to GPs, to commission NHS services, as being “at best a waste of time, at worst a waste of money”.
NICE advises on quality standards
The National Institute for Health and Clinical Excellence (NICE) has presented the Health Secretary Andrew Lansley with advice on new, national, evidence-based quality standards on the care and treatment of stroke,
Network solution to child surgery shortfall
Surgery for children faces a future skills crisis with sick children facing unnecessary delays for operations or travelling long distances for routine surgery unless co-ordinated action is taken now by the surgical profession and the NHS, the Royal College of Surgeons has warned.
Vaccine to prevent more cancers
The cervical cancer vaccine could prevent even more cases of the disease in England than previously thought, UK scientists have found. A study by scientists at the Health Protection Agency (HPA), the University of Manchester and the Manchester Royal Infirmary suggests that the vaccine could potentially reduce the number of cases each year from about 3,000 to less than 700.
Safety advice for junior doctors
An updated guide has been published by the National Patient Safety Agency (NPSA) which describes steps junior doctors should follow in the event of a medical safety incident.
Action urged on vascular surgery
The numbers of patients who die following complex surgery to repair blocked or damaged blood vessels could be significantly reduced if the NHS recognised vascular surgery as a full specialty and organised care within hospitals accordingly.
GPs must be involved in maternity care
GPs’ lack of involvement in maternity care is undermining the care of pregnant women and their families, according to a report published for The King’s Fund’s Inquiry into the Quality of General Practice in England.
Heart deaths fall
Deaths from heart and circulatory disease have fallen dramatically in the last decade, according to the latest figures from the Office for National Statistics. Circulatory diseases, such as heart disease, remain the most common major cause of death.
New safety guidance on treating clots
The National Patient Safety Agency (NPSA) has issued guidance to NHS organisations across England and Wales to ensure that a patient’s weight is known and documented before medication is given to treat blood clots. Doses of the injectable medicines, known as low molecular weight heparins (LMWH), are used to thin the blood to aid circulation.
Comprehensive care Foley tray
The all-in-one BARD Comprehensive Care Foley Tray, that provides all the essential items required for a catheterisation or recatheterisation procedure, is now available with the Bardex I.C anti-infective Foley catheter. The catheter, with Bacti-Guard silver alloy coating, helps reduce CAUTIs by more than a third and its advantages are supported by a wide range of clinical studies.
Support for tighter regulation of teleradiology services
More than 80 percent of visitors to the Medica stand at UKRC said they believe that teleradiology should be regulated. The poll was taken as part of a 'Join The Debate' theme on the stand which featured live panel discussions (broadcast to a large screen on the outside of the stand), themed 'pods' where people could vote on the big issues of the day and a live 'blogpoint' where visitors could make instant contributions.
Changes in endoscope reprocessing
There is a need to remove endoscope reprocessing from treatment areas and to ensure that it is performed in dedicated facilities by specialist staff, decontamination experts argue. The question of how the specification of facilities and equipment can be optimised, on a local basis, to ensure best practice is covered in a workshop and study day organised by Schulke UK and chaired by Paul Jenkins, Decontamination Manager, North Bristol NHS Trust.
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