Thursday 29 January 2015

Volunteers invited to join new emergency response organisation in Northamptonshire

Volunteers invited to join new emergency response organisation in Northamptonshire A community organisation that aims to make sure people in Northamptonshire are better prepared for an emergency has been officially launched. Northamptonshire Chronicle and Echo

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Public satisfaction with the NHS in 2014

Public satisfaction with the NHS in 2014 Analysis of the results and satisfaction trends relating to the NHS and health care issues from the British Social Attitudes survey 2014. The King's Fund

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Press release: New funds to kickstart joint working with NHS and councils this winter

Press release: New funds to kickstart joint working with NHS and councils this winter The government has found new funds to encourage more joint working between councils and the NHS.

In a bid to ease the pressure on the NHS during the current cold snap, the Department for Communities and Local Government and Department of Health have released an extra £37 million for councils to get people home from hospital more quickly and stop them from being admitted in the first place.

The Department for Communities and Local Government has this week provided £12 million to help join up health and social care services so that there aren’t delays for people who can be safely discharged and to avoid people needing to go to hospital in the first place (perhaps because of falls or flu).

The money will mean up to 3,500 more people a week will get home from hospital more quickly this winter, with the local authority putting in place carers and equipment to meet their needs, freeing up much-needed hospital beds within the NHS.

The extra cash is on top of the £700 million the Department of Health has found for the NHS to help manage its winter pressures and a further £25 million that councils have already been given this month to help speed up the discharge system.

It also comes ahead of the introduction in April 2015 of a £5.3 billion Better Care Fund, which will start to transform the way the NHS and councils work together to put people first and enable them live at home with dignity and independence for longer. Department of Health

New tool models youth smoking variation across England

New tool models youth smoking variation across England Commissioned by Public Health England (PHE) and NICE, and modelled by the University of Portsmouth and the University of Southampton, the figures are estimates of youth smoking rates for every local authority, ward and local NHS level, based on factors known to predict smoking in young people.

The data will help local organisations to respond to high levels of smoking within their areas.

Guidance: Smoking cessation in secondary care: mental health settings

Guidance: Smoking cessation in secondary care: mental health settings Self-assessment framework for NHS mental health trusts to develop local action to reduce smoking prevalence and the use of tobacco. Public Health England

Care spend 'cut by fifth in decade'

Care spend 'cut by fifth in decade' Spending on care for people aged 65 and over has fallen by a fifth in England over the last 10 years, an analysis by the BBC shows. BBC News

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Ebola virus mutating, scientists say

Ebola virus mutating, scientists say Scientists at the Institute Pasteur in France who are tracking the Ebola outbreak in Guinea say the virus has mutated. BBC News

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Doctors in the dock: Scandal of GPs who get cash from healthcare firms for patient referrals

Doctors in the dock: Scandal of GPs who get cash from healthcare firms for patient referrals The financial interests of all UK doctors should be made public, the country’s leading medical journal has said, after an investigation revealed incentives, often worth tens of thousands of pounds, have been offered to doctors by private healthcare companies in exchange for referring patients to their hospitals. The Independent

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NHS 'crisis guidelines' questioned

NHS 'crisis guidelines' questioned New NHS guidelines to some hospitals in England about "major incidents" prompt claims ministers are seeking to deter hospitals from declaring a crisis. BBC News

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Gift vouchers can help pregnant smokers quit

Gift vouchers can help pregnant smokers quit "Offering shopping vouchers worth a total of £400 to pregnant smokers makes them more likely to quit the habit, say researchers," BBC News reports.

The study, conducted in Glasgow, involved 612 pregnant women referred to pregnancy stop smoking services. The women were randomised to receive standard stop smoking care alone (control), or standard care in addition to up to £400 in vouchers if they successfully quit the habit.

The study found significantly more women in the voucher group (22.5%) stopped smoking by late pregnancy (34 to 38 weeks) compared with the control group (8.6%).

An obvious response to this – found in many news websites, as well as comments on message boards – is why should we bribe women to do what is best for their unborn baby?

A pragmatic answer to that question is it could save children's lives. Smoking during pregnancy is a major health problem estimated to cause the deaths of 5,000 unborn foetuses and babies each year in the UK, and costs the health system millions of pounds.

And the results of this study were within the range considered to be a cost effective use of healthcare resources.

NHS hires 3,000 foreign doctors in one year to fight lack of homegrown staff

NHS hires 3,000 foreign doctors in one year to fight lack of homegrown staff Exclusive: Guardian investigation finds that aggressive recruitment sees doctors from at least 27 countries hired in 32 of the 160 hospital trusts in England.

Three thousand doctors were hired from overseas by the NHS in the past year, as the service battles to tackle staff shortages that medical professionals say are serious and growing.

They came from at least 27 countries, including India, Poland, Australia and Greece – but also even Iraq, Syria and Sudan – according to 32 of the 160 hospital trusts in England who responded to requests from the Guardian for details of their recruitment.

The problem is finding permanent staff to recruit. Some hospital finance directors are asking, ‘are there any?'

The NHS doesn't have the doctors it needs. The shortage is real Continue reading... The Guardian

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