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Content Article
This leaflet was designed by the Critical Care Outreach team in Brighton and Sussex University Hospitals Trust. Call 4 concern was initiated by Mandy O'Dell, Nurse Consultant from the Royal Berkshire NHS Foundation Trust. Call 4 concern was set up to enable patients, carers and families to escalate deterioration to the outreach team - to get their voices heard.- Posted
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Dementia Safety Guidelines - Care Giver Homes (January 2018)
Claire Cox posted an article in Dementia
This guide, written by Angela Stringfellow from Care Giver Homes, sets out how people with dementia, and people caring for people with dementia, can keep safe. -
Content Article
This guide is aimed at patients and carers who may be undertaking a social care assessment. Written by the National Institute for Health and Care Excellence (NICE) and Social Care Institute for Excellence (SCIE).- Posted
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ReSPECT stands for Recommended Summary Plan for Emergency Care and Treatment. The ReSPECT process creates a personalised recommendation for your clinical care in emergency situations where you are not able to make decisions or express your wishes. In an emergency, health or care professionals may have to make rapid decisions about your treatment, and you may not be well enough to discuss and make choices. This plan empowers you to guide them on what treatments you would or would not want to be considered for, and to have recorded those treatments that could be important or those that would not work for you.- Posted
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Sepsis screening tool telephone triage for the under 5s
Claire Cox posted an article in Paediatrics
This is a tool for telephone triage/out of hospital for sepsis in children under five years, devised by the Sepsis Trust, aimed at community healthcare workers or carers. -
Content Article
Which? magazine explores ways to keep people safe in their homes and outside by using electronic devices to alert others for assistance. Personal alarms allow people to call for assistance if they have an accident or a fall at home. They can help older and less abled people to feel safer at home, and to remain independent for longer. They can also offer peace of mind to family and friends. -
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Despite recent policy recommendations advocating the use of health apps in routine clinical practice, they are rarely recommended to patients by healthcare professionals in practice. To find out why, ORCHA (Organisation for the Review of Care and Health Applications) conducted its first study of healthcare professionals’ views regarding digital health, published in the Lancet Digital Health. Conducting in-depth interviews followed by a quantitative survey with healthcare professionals, ORCHA discovered what is most important, of some importance and of limited influence to healthcare professionals when considering recommending a health app to patients. -
Community Post
Call 4 Concern
Claire Cox posted a topic in Keeping patients safe
Call 4 Concern is an initiative started by Critical Care Outreach Nurse Consultant, Mandy Odell. Relatives/carers know our patients best - they notice the subtle signs of deterioration in their loved one. Families and carers are now able to refer straight to the Critical care outreach team directly if they feel that care has not been escalated. Want to set up a call for concern initiative in your Trust? Need some support? Are you a relative that would like it in your Trust? Leave comments below -- Posted
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This policy is for patients and the public, and for NHS England staff. It sets out NHS England’s ambition of strengthening patient and public participation in all of its work, and how it intends to achieve this. The term ‘patients and the public’ includes everyone who uses services or may do so in the future, including carers and families. People who use health and care services may be referred to as ‘experts by experience’. NHS England recognises and values what they can contribute to its work as a result of their lived experience.- Posted
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React To: Training resources for care homes
Patient Safety Learning posted an article in Community care
React To is a series of training resources developed by healthcare professionals. Although aimed at care home staff these resources are also relevant to other carers and healthcare professionals. -
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Produced by the NHS Leeds Communications/Patient and Public Involvement and Experience Teams, the aim of this guide is to offer some support and practical guidance to GP Practices, who are interested in involving patients and carers in the running of their practice. The guidance will also support practices in achieving their Patient Participation Directed Enhanced Service (PPDES) The guidance will also support practices in achieving their Patient Participation Directed Enhanced Service (PPDES).- Posted
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This DIY Health model was co-created by Bromley by Bow Health Partnership (BBBHP, Tower Hamlets, London) in partnership with the community it serves in response to a need identifiable across most general practices across the country. Parents of children under the age of 5 were frequently re-attending St Andrew's Health Centre (one of three surgeries run by BBBHP) for support with managing self-limiting childhood problems. These repeat visits led to a recognition that health care professionals needed to work better with parents and carers to identify how to provide knowledge and skills that ensure they were more confident to manage their children’s health at home, and when to seek further help. The model which this article describes was inspired by Dr Khyati Bakhai’s work during her Darzi Fellowship in Clinical Leadership and was co-produced in partnership with local parents. -
Content Article
The risks of accidentally dropping a baby are well known, particularly when a parent falls asleep while holding a baby; or when a parent or healthcare worker holding the baby slips, trips or falls. However, despite healthcare staff routinely using a range of approaches to make handling of babies as safe as possible, and advising new parents on how to safely feed, carry and change their babies, on rare occasions babies are accidentally dropped. This safety alert was issued after a consultant neonatologist raised concerns about an increase in the number of accidentally dropped babies in his organisation. A search of the National Reporting and Learning System (NRLS) for a recent 12 month period identified; 182 babies who had been accidentally dropped in obstetric/ midwifery inpatient settings (eight with significant reported injuries, including fractured skulls and/or intracranial bleeds), 66 babies accidentally dropped on paediatric wards, and two in mother and baby units in mental health trusts. Almost all of these 250 incidents occurred when the baby was in the care of parents or visiting family members. -
Content Article
Brighton and Hove Clinical Commissioning Group have produced this pack to support carers with undertaking the National Care Certificate and can be used as a reference guide for families and personal assistants to promote awareness of certain needs and encourage referral if concerns are identified. It was designed for care workers and carers as they are in the ideal position to recognise changes in an individual’s condition by monitoring them and/or recognising any deterioration in a person’s wellbeing. The booklet aims to increase awareness and supports the care worker/carer to refer on when appropriate. It highlights why different aspects of observation and care are important, what to look for and what action to take.