Wednesday 7 September 2016

Two Rushden care homes praised by inspectors

Two Rushden care homes praised by inspectors Two Rushden care homes which help adults with learning difficulties have been praised by inspectors. Northampton Chronicle and Echo

Begin with culture; the rest will follow

Begin with culture; the rest will follow What drives high performance in the NHS? Is it the promise of reward and recognition? Or is it the fear of impending punishment and blame? The answer is neither.

It’s said that motivation is all about rewarding good behaviour and punishing bad behaviour. Simple. Except that humans are not so simple. And research shows that while this formulaic approach might work with rats and dogs, it doesn’t bring about lasting changes in attitudes, values or mindsets in humans. When incentives and threats are taken away or made less explicit, their influence diminishes and, over time, their effects can disappear completely. So this quick and dirty approach to employee motivation can only go so far in bringing about and sustaining the highest quality of patient care that we all want to see throughout the NHS. The King's Fund

Action plan for the prevention and control of noncommunicable diseases in the WHO European Region

Action plan for the prevention and control of noncommunicable diseases in the WHO European Region This plan outlines a vision for the prevention and control of long-term conditions and chronic disease in the WHO European Region. It outlines actions which can help to considerably reduce the burden of long-term conditions, improve quality of life and make healthy life expectancy more equitable. In addition to early diagnosis, the plan advocates the use of fiscal policies and marketing restrictions to promote healthy eating and reducing sedentary behaviour through the health system and environmental modifications. World Health Organization

Understanding safe caseloads in the district nursing service

Understanding safe caseloads in the district nursing service This discussion paper summarises the challenges in managing safe caseloads in district nursing and points to specific actions needed to improve and safeguard the future quality of services. The report provides a thematic overview of the issues that should be taken into account when determining a safe caseload including: skill mix, capacity of other health and care services, use of technology and housing. The Queen's Nursing Institute

Southern Health: New job for ex-boss Katrina Percy 'did not exist'

Southern Health: New job for ex-boss Katrina Percy 'did not exist' The chief executive who resigned as the head of a troubled mental health trust had a new job created for her worth £240,000 a year. BBC News

See also:

WHO strengthens Zika safe sex guidance

WHO strengthens Zika safe sex guidance Men and women returning from any area where the Zika is circulating should practice safe sex for at least six months to avoid the risk of spreading the disease, says the World Health Organization. BBC News

See also:

Seven-day GP services not cost-effective, UK study suggests

Seven-day GP services not cost-effective, UK study suggests NHS chiefs set out plans to spend £500m on seven-day GP services and extended access schemes by 2020/21 as part of the GP Forward View published earlier this year.

But findings from research on an extended access scheme in Manchester shows that funding of £3.1m across 56 GP practices generated savings in hospital worth just £767,976.

The study, published in PLOS Medicine, compared GP and A&E attendances in 2014 at the 56 practices funded to extend their opening hours into evenings and weekends with 469 practices across the area that did not receive this funding. GP Online

See also:

More help to reduce diabetes amputations

More help to reduce diabetes amputations With diabetes-related amputations continuing to rise the campaigning charity Diabetes UK has developed a new guide designed to encourage healthcare professionals to use root cause analysis to tackle the underlying problems that could result in the loss of a limb. OnMedica

NHS to have one website for appointments, prescriptions and advice

NHS to have one website for appointments, prescriptions and advice The NHS.uk website is intended to be ready by the end of next year and will allow patients to compare their NHS trust’s performance with that of others

A one-stop NHS website where patients book appointments, order prescriptions and access medical advice is being developed, health officials have announced. Continue reading... The Guardian

See also:

STPs: Radical local modernisation plans or the end of the NHS as we know it?

STPs: Radical local modernisation plans or the end of the NHS as we know it? Controversial Sustainability and Transformation Plans are set to determine the future of England’s health service over the next four years

To some, they are bold, painful, inevitably controversial but nevertheless necessary local blueprints designed to save the NHS in England, area by area, by making it fit for the clinical, financial and organisational challenges it is facing. To others, though, they are sinister schemes that will see parts of, or even entire hospitals shut, fewer beds, the number of GP surgeries drastically reduced, NHS land sold to profiteers and private healthcare firms treating more NHS patients. What an NHS boss calls modernisation is an NHS campaigner’s road to destruction. Continue reading... The Guardian

NHS dentistry is in a state of serious decay | Owen Jones

NHS dentistry is in a state of serious decay | Owen Jones The British Dental Association has revealed that many people postpone treatment because of its price, at great cost both to their teeth and to the NHS

Finally, some outrage about the national scandal that is dentistry. The health of our teeth matters, but dentistry has long been a neglected arm of the NHS. The British Dental Association has just revealed that 600,000 people have made futile appointments with GPs over dental problems in a year, at a cost to the NHS of £26m. It’s a statistic that has provoked mockery – one person tweeted: “I wonder if the 600,000 people a year who go to the GP for dental care ask electricians to fix their roofs as well?” But it is not the patients who should be shamed – it is the government.

One in seven children haven’t visited a dentist by their eighth birthday Continue reading... The Guardian

Junior doctors urged to hold fresh ballot before striking 

Junior doctors urged to hold fresh ballot before striking Junior doctors should not go ahead with crippling week-long strikes without a fresh ballot by their union, the head of the Commons health select committee has said.

Dr Sarah Wollaston, a former GP, urged the British Medical Association (BMA) to call off planned strikes - saying such actions were "grossly disproportionate and completely unjustified".

The legal basis for the strikes is a ballot last November on a new contract for junior doctors. The Daily Telegraph

See also: