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Found 1,313 results
  1. News Article
    Patients, or carers of patients, who carry Emerade 300 or 500 microgram adrenaline auto-injector pens should immediately contact their GP to obtain a prescription for, and be supplied with two auto-injectors of a different brand. Pharmacists and pharmacy teams can also help with obtaining new prescriptions and dispensing of new pens. Patients or carers should then return all Emerade 300 and 500 micrograms auto-injectors to their local pharmacy. Patients should only return their Emerade pens when they have received a replacement from their pharmacy which will be an alternative brand - either EpiPen or Jext. They should ensure they know how to use the replacement pen, as each brand of pen works differently. Patients should ask their doctor, pharmacist, or nurse for help with this. Instructions are included inside the pack, along with details of the manufacturer’s website that also provides information, including videos, on how to use a new EpiPen or Jext adrenaline pen. This precautionary recall is because some 300 microgram and 500 microgram Emerade auto-injector pens may rarely fail to activate if they are dropped, meaning a dose of adrenaline would not be delivered. Premature activation has also been detected in some of the 300 microgram and 500 microgram pens after they have been dropped, meaning that a dose of adrenaline is delivered too early. The activation failure and premature activation was detected during a design assessment conducted by the manufacturer and therefore means there is a potential for some 300 microgram and 500 microgram Emerade pens to fail during use after having been dropped. Read MHRA Press Release. 9 May 2023
  2. News Article
    Knocking on doors to check on people's health and catch problems before they escalate is common practice across Brazil. But could that approach work in the UK? Comfort and Nahima are two out of four door-knockers on round Churchill Gardens, a council estate in the Pimlico neighbourhood of London, visiting residents as part of a proactive community healthcare pilot. They can help with anything from housing issues which impact health, such as overcrowding, or pick up the early signs of diabetes by chatting informally to residents about their lifestyle. These community health workers are partly funded by the local authority and partly by the NHS so they can co-ordinate between the local GP surgery and other social services. Local GP Dr Connie Junghans-Minton says the proactive approach had led to fewer requests for appointments The National Institute for Health Research helped crunch the data from the pilot. Households which had been visited regularly were 47% more likely to have received immunisations and 82% more likely to have taken up cancer screening, compared to other areas. The idea to import this model to the UK came from Dr Matthew Harris, a public health expert at Imperial College London who worked as a GP in Brazil for four years. There, community health workers have been credited with achieving a drop of 34% in cardiovascular deaths. "In Brazil they have scaled this role to such degree that they have 270,000 community health workers across the whole country, each of which looks after 150 households, visiting them at least once a month," Dr Harris said. "They've seen extraordinary outcomes in terms of population health in the last two or three decades. We think we've got a lot to learn from that." Read full story Source: BBC News, 9 May 2023
  3. News Article
    A hospital trust has said its staff have been verbally abused when contacting some patients to postpone their appointments because of next week’s nursing strike. Oxford University Hospitals Foundation Trust posted a statement to its website yesterday, which said: “It is very regrettable that we have to report that our staff have been verbally abused when contacting some patients to postpone their appointments. We fully understand and appreciate how disappointing and frustrating any postponement is, and we only do this if we absolutely have to in order to provide safe care for all our patients. “Our staff are doing their best in challenging circumstances to make sure you are informed as soon as possible. We do not tolerate abuse of our staff and abuse will be noted and further action may be taken.” Read full story (paywalled) Source: HSJ, 27 April 2023
  4. News Article
    Women in labour should be offered an alternative to an epidural spinal block injection, say new draft guidelines for the NHS. The National Institute for Health and Care Excellence (NICE) is recommending remifentanil, which is a fast-acting morphine-like drug given into a vein. Women control the medication themselves, by pressing a button to get more of the drug for pain relief. A timer ensures the user cannot administer too much of it. Women who decide to try remifentanil and do not like it could still decide to have an epidural instead if there is no medical reason why they should not. They can use gas and air, also called Entonox, which is a mix of oxygen and nitrous oxide, at the same time. NICE says having remifentanil as a treatment option has advantages - it might enable women to be more mobile than with an epidural, which makes the legs numb and weak, for example. Evidence suggests fewer epidurals might mean fewer births using instruments like forceps and ventouse vacuum suction, says NICE. Read full story Source: BBC News, 25 April 2023
  5. News Article
    Take-up and usage of the NHS App in England has begun to plateau, after covid drove huge growth, figures seen by HSJ suggest. This can be seen in the percentage of GP appointments booked or cancelled using the app; the number of records viewed; and the number of times it has been downloaded. Rapid uptake was driven during covid restrictions, when travel and other activities often required a covid vaccination pass. Government has said it wants the growth to continue. The number of GP appointments booked or cancelled using the app fell for a third consecutive month in March to 212,954, representing a decrease of 15% since January and 28% on October 2022, when usage peaked. The NHS app is central to government’s plan for digital health and care, published last year, billed as the “digital front door” to the NHS which would aid the recovery of services post-pandemic. Read full story (paywalled) Source: HSJ, 19 April 2023
  6. News Article
    More than two million patients each year have to make four or more repeat visits to their GP before they get a referral, a patient watchdog has warned. Patient safety campaigners said people faced waits of “weeks, months or even years” before officially joining NHS waiting lists, and that their health and wellbeing was suffering as a result. They warned it would also add to pressure on other services such as A&E departments. Research by Healthwatch England revealed what the patient watchdog called a “hidden waiting list”. “People wait for a GP appointment; they wait for their GP to tell them they will be referred; they wait for the hospital to confirm that referral; and then they join a hospital waiting list,” it said. “NHS statistics monitor only the hospital waiting list, leaving the steps between getting a GP referral and a letter confirming a hospital appointment as a dangerous ‘blind spot’ for the NHS and patients.” Read full story (paywalled) Source: The Times, 11 April 2023
  7. News Article
    Patients contacting NHS 111 in England are having to wait so long for medical help that they are abandoning millions of calls, with 3.6m ditched in the past 12 months, official figures reveal. The national helpline service is supposed to make it quicker and easier for patients to get the right advice or treatment they need, either for their physical or mental health. It is billed as being open 24 hours a day, seven days a week. However, analysis by the House of Commons Library, commissioned by the Liberal Democrats, shows callers are waiting so long to speak to someone that nearly one in five give up. In 2022, 3,682,516 calls to NHS 111 were abandoned. MPs said the “dire” figures exposed how the NHS had reached “breaking point” after years of “neglect and underfunding” by the government. The data suggests that, on average, more than 10,000 callers hang up every day without receiving medical advice or treatment. As well as being distressing for those who are unwell, abandoned NHS 111 calls pose a risk to patient safety. The problem also increases pressure on other urgent care services as people seek care elsewhere. Read full story Source: The Guardian, 10 April 2023
  8. News Article
    A woman who may only have months to live has told the BBC she is "angry and frustrated" at being in hospital five months after being cleared to go home. Charlotte Mills-Murray, 34, said attempts to organise care at her family home had been repeatedly delayed. Charlotte lives with intestinal failure caused by a severe form of Ehlers-Danlos syndrome, which weakens her body's connective tissue. She was admitted to St James's Hospital in Leeds in June 2022 following an infection, and a new Hickman line - a tube that allows feeding and the administering of pain relief - was inserted. By November, Charlotte was told she was well enough to be cared for at home, but she remains in hospital following delays in the hiring and training of staff able to support her. With limited access to a hoist which would enable her to use her wheelchair, Charlotte said she had spent 10 months "stuck in bed". Because of the complexity of her condition, Charlotte only has months to live. She believes her situation merits greater urgency because of the increased risk of infection in hospital. Charlotte qualifies for 24-hour home care support through the NHS Continuing Healthcare scheme, but she said decisions over how this would be put in place had been slow and unclear. The BBC has found a 16% rise over the past year in the number of patients in England who are in hospital despite being well enough to leave. The Department of Health and Social Care said it was "fully committed to speeding up the safe discharge of patients who no longer need to be in hospital" and was making £1.6bn available in England over the next two years to support this, on top of £700m of extra funding in 2022 to ease NHS pressures over the winter. Read full story Source: BBC News, 9 April 2023
  9. News Article
    Following the Advanced cyber attack in August 2022, Phil Huggins has revealed to a Digital Health Rewired audience that the NHS has “seen no clinical impact or significant clinical harm”, after a review to be released in the near future. The national chief information security officer for health and care at NHS England was speaking alongside a panel on the Cyber Security Stage on day two of Digital Health Rewired 2023 in London. Huggins explained that although the impact of the Advanced attack was big on the system, in a clinical sense it was not particularly damaging, despite the fact that client data was confirmed to have been exfiltrated. However, Ayesha Rahim, clinical lead for digital mental health at NHS England and chief medical information officer at Surrey and Borders Partnership Foundation Trust, was also on the panel, and spoke of the huge impact the attack had on staff. “The date 4th August is imprinted in my brain”, Rahim said, which is when the attack first happened and was first reported. She explained that it is “quite difficult to fully convey the chaos this caused”, giving examples of staff having no idea what a patient’s background was and therefore having to do everything “blindfolded”. Rahim said staff could not tell if it was safe to go out on visits to mental health patients due to the lack of data and information on them, and every time a person saw a staff member they were retraumatised having to explain their past over and over, including experiences of sexual abuse. Read full story Source: Digital Health, 15 March 2023
  10. News Article
    NHS staff have accused Steve Barclay of breaking a pledge to publish details of how many of them are abused and assaulted in the course of their work. In 2018, when Barclay was a junior minister in the Department of Health and Social Care (DHSC), he promised he would resume publication of those statistics in the following year. However, five years later, Barclay has not fulfilled his pledge, despite being in his second stint as health secretary. Health unions and NHS leaders have warned that frontline staff have been on the receiving end of increased abuse, threats, aggression and assaults since the first outbreak of Covid. Long waiting times for care appear to be a particular source of frustration for some patients or their relatives. Growing numbers of ambulance crew personnel have begun using body-worn cameras in recent years to deter assaults and record any that do occur. In 2022, the London ambulance service recorded 877 reports of verbal abuse or threats of violence, 516 physical assaults – including kicking, punching, head-butting and use of a weapon – and 49 sexual assaults on staff. Read full story Source: The Guardian, 16 March 2023
  11. News Article
    Acute trusts are reporting high demand at emergency departments (EDs) despite junior doctor strikes, which in some cases threaten to lead to overflowing wards and long ambulance handover delays. Chief executives and directors from trusts around England told HSJ their EDs had been as busy or busier than usual. Many had hoped prominent media coverage and NHS announcements about the strikes would lead to reduced demand, helping them cope with fewer doctors on duty. Several claimed it showed national communications about the strikes were lacking. NHS England has said some hospitals saw their busiest Monday of the year so far yesterday, which it said “presents a major challenge as our staff continue to do all they can to mitigate the impact of the industrial action for patients.” Read full story (paywalled) Source: HSJ, 14 March 2023
  12. Content Article
    Across England, hospital activity continues to be seriously impacted by the Covid-19 pandemic with large falls in routine care resulting in millions of patients now subject to vast backlogs. Data analysis shows people from Asian groups faced larger falls in planned hospital care – both before and during the pandemic – than people from White, Black or Mixed ethnic groups. This infographic resource, designed in collaboration with the Nuffield Trust, aims to support the health care system by highlighting 10 key ways to tackle these disparities, and to take practical actions to address the ethnicity gap in care provision.
  13. Content Article
    Storytelling gives a voice to patients and staff as well as providing an opportunity for others to understand the importance of patient safety from the perspectives of those that access services or work within them. This toolkit was developed by the National Quality and Patient Safety Directorate in Ireland which works in partnership with health services, patient representatives and other partners to improve patient safety and quality of care. It provides a step by step guide to creating patient and staff stories.
  14. Content Article
    “Medical gaslighting” is a controversial term that has emerged to describe a phenomenon some people – women in particular – may recognise. It refers to a patient’s feeling that their symptoms are not taken seriously, or are being misdiagnosed by healthcare professionals. When she was 37, Eleanor presented at a hospital emergency department with severe chest pain. She was diagnosed with slightly high cholesterol and sent home. Three days later, she suffered excruciating pain and was taken to hospital in an ambulance. There, she was asked if she had suffered from panic attacks and was left overnight in a cubicle, before doctors realised she was having a heart attack. She needed eight cardiac stents. “I am sure no man would be asked if they suffer from panic attacks while they’re having a heart attack,” she says. This article in the Irish Times asks why women are more likely to feel their symptoms are not being taken seriously by doctors. Further reading on the hub: ‘Women are being dismissed, disbelieved and shut out’ Gender bias: A threat to women’s health Dangerous exclusions: The risk to patient safety of sex and gender bias
  15. Content Article
    Sleep deprivation due to extended work hours and circadian disruption has long been a concern in medicine. The levels of continuous duty and work hours for health care personnel are much greater than those allowed in the transportation and nuclear-power industries. The problem is most severe for residents in training but extends to experienced physicians and nurses. Clinicians who have been deprived of sleep are part of a health care system in trouble. A report from the Institute of Medicine concluded that the system fails to ensure that patients are safe or that the quality of care they receive is high. In this article, David Gaba and Steven Howard discuss current and proposed policies concerning clinicians' work hours and fatigue.  
  16. Content Article
    In 2022, the Co-Production Collective worked with several partners and hundreds of co-producers to try to answer the question, "What is the value of co-production?" The aim of this project was to make the case for the value of co-production for individuals, organisations and society. This webpage contains information about the project and resources about co-production that it has generated, including videos, reports and stories relating to these stages: Survey Rapid critical review Community reporting Pilot projects
  17. Content Article
    Staying active is important if you’re waiting for or recovering from surgery. If you’re fit and strong, your surgery has the best chance of success, and you’ll likely recover quicker. Over time, exercise can also increase your mobility, help your balance and boost your mood.  In this Surgery Toolkit you'll find tailor-made, follow-along exercise routines for hip, shoulder and knee replacement, as well as full body workouts to help you maintain overall fitness.   You can also explore personal stories and advice from those living with arthritis who have been through joint replacement surgery, and tips on keeping active from a physiotherapist. 
  18. Content Article
    This download A4 Easy Read booklet from Jo's Cervical Cancer Trust uses simple language and pictures to talk about smear tests. It explains what a smear test is and has tips to make it better for you. It also has a list of words you might hear. Please note this edition of the Easy Read booklet has not been updated with HPV primary screening, but the information and tips about cervical screening are correct. 
  19. Content Article
    Sarah Woolf shares the impact her cancer treatment had on her mental health and describes why it is important to see each patient as a whole person, understanding that their body has meaning for them
  20. Content Article
    This blog by Brita Lundberg of Lundberg Health Advocates looks at how healthcare providers can sometimes blame the patient for their condition, errors in treatment and communication issues. She looks at the role that language used in medical settings and historical views of the medical profession have on the tendency to blame patients, and highlights how the issue is also present in wider society. She offers three potential steps to help tackle patient-blaming: Recognise the problem, as it is difficult if not impossible to solve a problem until one recognises that it exists. Families, friends and clinicians should start with the assumption that the patient is correct and question others, particularly any in authority. All of us can be much too quick to dismiss patients’ concerns and to reassure them. It’s a bad habit. Instead–it is prudent never to eliminate any diagnosis, particularly one suggested by the patient, until all the supporting and contradictory evidence for each is carefully considered. Listen–that terribly overused and so little practiced—word. Listening instead of interrupting right away not only helps preserve the flow of the narrative but also gives us time to think about what is being said, and time to formulate a more considered response.
  21. Content Article
    With the NHS under relentless pressure this winter and as records keep getting broken for all the wrong reasons, Helen Buckingham takes a closer look at why hospitals are so full, and emphasises the importance of supporting and helping the health service’s staff.
  22. Content Article
    In this letter to Steve Barclay MP, Secretary of State for Health and Social Care, the chair and chief executive of the Patients Association, Sir Robert Francis and Rachel Power, raised their concerns about how the Government is dealing with the growing crisis in health and social care. The letter asked him to declare a national incident in the NHS and to publish solutions to the current crisis, developed with patients and carers. The letter also asked the Minister to publish the long-term workforce plan and includes an offer from the Patients Association to work with the Department for Health and Social Care (DHSC).
  23. Content Article
    Dr Henrietta Hughes, England's Patient Safety Commissioner, discusses how the experiences of people from Black and minority ethnic groups has worsened since the pandemic and how this has impacted on patient safety, in a blog for the NHS Race & Health Observatory.
  24. Content Article
    This document summarises the current landscape of virtual wards from the perspective of healthcare for older people, and provides advice to those looking to set up such services for older people living with frailty.
  25. Content Article
    We know that NHS organisations may sometimes need to reorganise their services to consider how they can best deliver care to patients. This can mean there is a need to repurpose existing environments, for example hospital wards or clinical areas. Staff may also be redeployed to deal with surges in demand when the pressure on the system is at its greatest. We commonly see this during winter, with ‘winter pressures’ wards, but we have also seen this become more common during other times of the year as the NHS deals with the lasting impact of coronavirus (COVID-19) and staff shortages in some key areas. It’s important that the NHS has this ability to adapt to try and make sure it can deliver the best and safest care to as many patients as possible. The ability to flex in this way helps to keep the NHS operating when it is at its busiest and makes sure that patients can still access appropriate care. Scott Hislop, the Healthcare Safety Investigation Branch (HSIB) Principal National Investigator, looks at the challenges faced by the NHS when flexing to meet demands and how to mitigate potential risks to patient safety.
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