This blog covers the latest UK health care news, publications, policy announcements, events and information focused on the NHS, as well as the latest media stories and local news coverage of the NHS Trusts in Northamptonshire.
Friday, 1 June 2012
Hospital apology over boy's birth
Hospital apology over boy's birth: Kettering General Hospital apologises to the family of a boy left permanently disabled after "serious blunders" during his birth. BBC Northamptonshire
Public tell doctors to focus on big killers
Public tell doctors to focus on big killers:
New GP group Nene Commissioning will take full responsibility for the health of the county, except Corby, which will be the responsibility of separate group Corby Healthcare, from next April. Evening Telegraph
New GP group Nene Commissioning will take full responsibility for the health of the county, except Corby, which will be the responsibility of separate group Corby Healthcare, from next April. Evening Telegraph
Updated guidance to NHS on the overseas visitors hospital charging system
Updated guidance to NHS on the overseas visitors hospital charging system:
The Department has updated its guidance for NHS bodies in carrying out their duties under the NHS (Charges to Overseas Visitors) Regulations 2011.
The updates incorporate some changes to advice given in December 2011 on when to share data with the UK Border Agency on overseas visitors with debts to the NHS. It also comments on what evidence will demonstrate that a member of the Olympic/Paralympic Games Family is entitled to free NHS hospital treatment.
The guidance as a whole is for NHS bodies in carrying out their duties to make and recover charges for NHS hospital treatment from overseas visitors not exempt from charge. It also includes guidance to safeguard the health of those not entitled to free hospital treatment.
Read Guidance on implementing the overseas visitors hospital charging regulations.Department of Health
The Department has updated its guidance for NHS bodies in carrying out their duties under the NHS (Charges to Overseas Visitors) Regulations 2011.
The updates incorporate some changes to advice given in December 2011 on when to share data with the UK Border Agency on overseas visitors with debts to the NHS. It also comments on what evidence will demonstrate that a member of the Olympic/Paralympic Games Family is entitled to free NHS hospital treatment.
The guidance as a whole is for NHS bodies in carrying out their duties to make and recover charges for NHS hospital treatment from overseas visitors not exempt from charge. It also includes guidance to safeguard the health of those not entitled to free hospital treatment.
Read Guidance on implementing the overseas visitors hospital charging regulations.Department of Health
Cardiac arrest in hospital can be prevented: report
Cardiac arrest in hospital can be prevented: report: A third of cardiac arrests and resuscitation attempts in hospital could be prevented if doctors assessed patients better, a report has found. The Daily Telegraph
NHS 'too quick to resuscitate': Frail elderly patients are suffering "undignified and distressing" deaths because hospitals wrongly try to resuscitate them, a watchdog says. BBC News
You can find the full report, exec. summary and audit tool on the NCEPOD site here.
NHS 'too quick to resuscitate': Frail elderly patients are suffering "undignified and distressing" deaths because hospitals wrongly try to resuscitate them, a watchdog says. BBC News
You can find the full report, exec. summary and audit tool on the NCEPOD site here.
Lower pay for NHS staff suggested
Lower pay for NHS staff suggested: South West NHS staff could face pay cuts and have to reapply for jobs if regional pay is introduced, a leaked document suggests. BBC News
Using care bundles to improve health care quality
Using care bundles to improve health care quality:
This paper describes the history, theory of change, design concepts, and outcomes associated with the development and use of bundles over the past decade. It reflects on what has been learned and makes suggestions for further research and implementation of the bundle approach to improving care.
This paper describes the history, theory of change, design concepts, and outcomes associated with the development and use of bundles over the past decade. It reflects on what has been learned and makes suggestions for further research and implementation of the bundle approach to improving care.
Clinicians in management: does it make a difference?
Clinicians in management: does it make a difference?:
This research has found that the boards remain dominated by non-clinicians, such as accountants and managers and that clinicians make up an average of just 26% of board members in English hospital trusts, with major variations around the country. It looks at the relationship between having doctors on the boards of trusts and patient satisfaction rates, patient morbidity rates and how highly the hospital’s management is regarded.
This research has found that the boards remain dominated by non-clinicians, such as accountants and managers and that clinicians make up an average of just 26% of board members in English hospital trusts, with major variations around the country. It looks at the relationship between having doctors on the boards of trusts and patient satisfaction rates, patient morbidity rates and how highly the hospital’s management is regarded.
Changes to regional offices plan for NHS
Changes to regional offices plan for NHS:
Plans for regional offices to replace primary care trusts and strategic health authorities have been scaled back by the NHS Commissioning Board.
Original plans for 50 local offices are now to be amended so that there will be only 27, that is one fewer than the 28 SHAs that were formed in 2002, before they were slimmed down to 10 by health secretary Patricia Hewitt. Ian Dalton, deputy chief executive of the NHS CB... Healthcare Today
Plans for regional offices to replace primary care trusts and strategic health authorities have been scaled back by the NHS Commissioning Board.
Original plans for 50 local offices are now to be amended so that there will be only 27, that is one fewer than the 28 SHAs that were formed in 2002, before they were slimmed down to 10 by health secretary Patricia Hewitt. Ian Dalton, deputy chief executive of the NHS CB... Healthcare Today
Doctors write open letter explaining their day of action
Doctors write open letter explaining their day of action: Doctors publish open letter in national newspapers to try to quell growing backlash against industrial action over pension reforms. The Daily Telegraph
Doctors' industrial action 'could affect one million patients'
Doctors' industrial action 'could affect one million patients': Doctors' industrial action will create a three month backlog and affect one million patients needing surgery or hospital appointments, it has emerged. The Daily Telegraph
Commercialisation of NHS trust 'not healthy'
Commercialisation of NHS trust 'not healthy':
An NHS trust has set up an advertising agency to sell billboard space around its hospitals and on its website. The Independent
An NHS trust has set up an advertising agency to sell billboard space around its hospitals and on its website. The Independent
Alcohol dependency drugs: 60 per cent rise in prescription items in eight years
Alcohol dependency drugs: 60 per cent rise in prescription items in eight years: - Report also shows rise in hospital admissions attributable to alcohol The number of prescription items dispensed annually to treat alcohol dependenc... NHS Information Centre
Are we 'overdiagnosing' harmless problems?
Are we 'overdiagnosing' harmless problems?:
Many patients are being “overdiagnosed” and given unnecessary medical treatment for problems that will never harm them, says new research. The study has featured prominently in the press, with the Daily Mail reporting “a plague of overdiagnosis”, and The Independent saying that “an over-reliance on healthcare threatens to bankrupt the world”.
The article, published in the British Medical Journal, argues that overdiagnosis poses a significant threat to human health by labelling healthy people as sick and wasting resources on unnecessary care. Overdiagnosis is when somebody is diagnosed and treated for a condition that is unlikely to cause them harm.
The authors of the report say there is growing evidence that “too many people are being overdosed, overtreated and overdiagnosed”. For example, they say, research has found that almost a third of people diagnosed with asthma may not have the condition, while up to one in three breast cancers detected by screening may actually be harmless.
As a result of overdiagnosis people potentially face the harms of unnecessary tests and side effects from treatment, and resources that could be directed at other patients are wasted.
The authors of this new article say that many different factors are driving overdiagnosis, but a key contributor is technological advance. Tests and diagnosis methods are now so numerous and sensitive that even the tiniest of harmless abnormalities can be detected, they argue.
The authors say new protocols are being developed to bring a more cautious approach to the treatment of incidental abnormalities. They say consideration should be given to raising the thresholds of what is defined as abnormal – in breast cancer screening, for example. At a policy level, reforming the process of defining disease is urgently required, they argue, to rule out financial or professional conflicts of interest.
The authors point out that concern about overdiagnosis does not preclude awareness that many people with genuine illness miss out on healthcare. They argue that resources wasted on unnecessary care can be much better spent treating and preventing genuine illness. “The challenge is to work out which is which.”
Nevertheless, the paper is a useful contribution to the complex debate about how far healthy people should be screened or tested, and how far conditions that may or may not cause harm in the future should be treated. It’s a difficult subject that provokes strongly opposing views among doctors and researchers. For example, a recent paper published in The Lancet argued that everyone over 50 should be given statins because they have been found to reduce the risks of heart attacks even in healthy people.
The article raises a number of concerns about cancer screening in particular, and it should be noted that in the UK the Department of Health announced last October that a full review of the potential risks and benefits of the NHS Breast Cancer Screening Programme is to take place. In terms of cancer screening, much will depend in the future on how far researchers are able to discriminate between ‘harmless’ slow growing cancers that do not need to be treated and those that are more aggressive.
The article should be seen in the context of previous advances in technology and treatments that have brought established benefits in terms of detecting certain conditions early. For example, high blood pressure is symptomless, but it is a recognised risk factor for cardiovascular disease, and there is good research to show that treatment to reduce high blood pressure saves lives.
Overall, the concept of overdiagnosis is one that needs careful consideration, particularly how its potential harms relate to the potential harms of failing to diagnose a disease. Is it better to risk side effects in patients than to risk missing a serious health problem? The issue is perhaps too big to cover in a single article, although this latest opinion paper raises some extremely interesting and thought-provoking points on the issue. Perhaps the key thing now is to look at overdiagnosis on a condition-by-condition basis, for example in the way that alleged overdiagnosis in breast cancer screening is being examined in the UK.
Although there are clearly strong feelings on both sides of the overdiagnosis debate, examinations of the issue should be as comprehensive, objective and evidence-based as possible and focus on specific topics. Overdiagnosis of one condition could be problematic, while it might produce few negative results for other conditions. Next year will see an international conference on the issue of overdiagnosis, which should stimulate both debate and research on this important issue.
Healthy hit by a plague of over diagnosis of conditions that will never cause serious symptoms. Daily Mail, May 30 2012
Is doctors' fixation on treatment making us ill?. The Independent, May 30 2012
Doctors 'overdiagnosing patients with slow or non-progressive diseases'. Metro, May 30 2012
NHS Choices
The article, published in the British Medical Journal, argues that overdiagnosis poses a significant threat to human health by labelling healthy people as sick and wasting resources on unnecessary care. Overdiagnosis is when somebody is diagnosed and treated for a condition that is unlikely to cause them harm.
The authors of the report say there is growing evidence that “too many people are being overdosed, overtreated and overdiagnosed”. For example, they say, research has found that almost a third of people diagnosed with asthma may not have the condition, while up to one in three breast cancers detected by screening may actually be harmless.
What is overdiagnosis?
The authors state that overdiagnosis is when a person without symptoms is diagnosed with a disease that will not cause them to experience symptoms or early death. More broadly defined, overdiagnosis refers to the related problems of increased dependence on medical care and overtreatment, which leads to healthy people with mild problems or at low risk being “reclassified as sick”.As a result of overdiagnosis people potentially face the harms of unnecessary tests and side effects from treatment, and resources that could be directed at other patients are wasted.
The authors of this new article say that many different factors are driving overdiagnosis, but a key contributor is technological advance. Tests and diagnosis methods are now so numerous and sensitive that even the tiniest of harmless abnormalities can be detected, they argue.
How does overdiagnosis happen?
The authors say that people can be overdiagnosed and overtreated in a number of ways:- Screening programmes can detect disease that may be in a form that will never cause symptoms or early death (sometimes called pseudodisease). Contrary to popular notions that cancers are universally harmful and ultimately fatal, the authors point out that some cancers can regress, fail to progress or grow so slowly that the individual concerned dies from other causes. They say there is now strong evidence from randomised trials that a proportion of cancers detected through screening may fall into this category.
- Tests for specific disease and disorders have become increasingly sensitive, enabling less severe forms of disease to be detected. A substantial proportion of the abnormalities that are detected will never progress, they say.
- Diagnostic scanning of the abdomen, pelvis, chest, head and neck can reveal ‘incidental’ findings in up to 40% of people being tested for other reasons. Most of these incidental abnormalities are benign but cause anxiety and lead to further investigations, they say.
- Overdiagnosis also occurs because of the changing diagnostic criteria for many diseases, so that people at lower risk and with milder problems are being defined as sick. For example, say the researchers, most elderly people are now classified as having at least one chronic condition, while many women treated for osteoporosis (weak bones) may be at very low risk of a fracture. The authors argue that diagnostic criteria are often set by panels of health professionals “with financial ties to companies that benefit directly from any expansion of the patient pool”.
What are examples of overdiagnosis?
The authors say there is evidence that the problem of overdiagnosis may exist across many conditions (including those for which underdiagnosis may also be a problem) and cite research on overdiagnosis in several different areas. The authors provide their opinions on various examples of what they see as overdiagnosis:- Breast cancer – a systematic review suggests that up to a third of breast cancers detected by screening may be overdiagnosed, which means they would not actually cause harm or early death if left untreated.
- Thyroid cancer – the likelihood of tests detecting a thyroid abnormality is high but the risk that it will ever cause harm is low. Many of the newly diagnosed thyroid cancers are the smaller and less aggressive forms that don’t require treatment, which itself carries risks.
- Gestational diabetes (diabetes that develops during pregnancy) – an expanded definition of this condition now means that nearly one in five pregnant women are classified as having it, while the evidence of benefit for being diagnosed is weak.
- Chronic kidney disease – an expanded definition of this condition means that one in ten people in the US are now classified as having the disease. One study estimates that up to a third of people over 65 meet the new criteria, yet each year fewer than 1 in 1,000 of this group will develop end-stage kidney disease.
- Asthma – the authors concede that while asthma can be underdiagnosed and undertreated, one large study suggests that almost a third of those diagnosed may not have the condition and that two-thirds of this group do not require medication.
- Pulmonary embolism (a blockage in the artery leading to the lungs, caused by a blood clot) – while pulmonary embolism is potentially fatal, the authors say that newer and more sensitive diagnostic tests are leading to the detection of smaller clots that may not require treatment.
- Attention deficit hyperactivity disorder (ADHD) – a widened definition of this condition has led to concerns about overdiagnosis, with one study showing that boys born at the end of the school year have a 30% higher chance of diagnosis and 40% higher chance of requiring medication than those born in the following month.
- Osteoporosis – expanded definitions of this condition mean many women at low risk of fracture may be given treatment that can result in adverse effects.
- Prostate cancer – research shows that the risk of a cancer detected by prostate specific antigen (PSA, a marker for prostate cancer found in the blood) being overdiagnosed may be more than 60%.
- Lung cancer – the authors cite research suggesting that around 25% of cases of lung cancer detected by screening may be overdiagnosed.
- High blood pressure – the authors cite research suggesting there is a possibility of “substantial overdiagnosis” of high blood pressure.
- High cholesterol – the authors cite research that estimates that up to 80% of people being treated have near-normal cholesterol levels.
What are the causes of overdiagnosis?
The authors say that overdiagnosis is being driven by several factors, including:- technological advances that can detect ever-smaller harmless abnormalities
• commercial and professional vested interests involved in the expansion of disease definitions and the writing of new guidelines for diagnosis and treatment - legal incentives that ‘punish’ underdiagnosis but not overdiagnosis
- health system incentives favouring more tests and treatments
- the cultural belief in early detection of disease and medical intervention
What solutions do the researchers recommend?
The authors argue that action is needed to tackle the problem of overdiagnosis. They say that medical professionals should aim to differentiate between benign abnormalities and those that will go on to cause harm, while the public and professionals should be given “more honest” information about the risks of overdiagnosis, particularly related to screening.The authors say new protocols are being developed to bring a more cautious approach to the treatment of incidental abnormalities. They say consideration should be given to raising the thresholds of what is defined as abnormal – in breast cancer screening, for example. At a policy level, reforming the process of defining disease is urgently required, they argue, to rule out financial or professional conflicts of interest.
The authors point out that concern about overdiagnosis does not preclude awareness that many people with genuine illness miss out on healthcare. They argue that resources wasted on unnecessary care can be much better spent treating and preventing genuine illness. “The challenge is to work out which is which.”
Conclusion
This is a powerfully argued and controversial article that claims that many people are being overdiagnosed and overtreated for mild problems that may never cause them harm. It is timed to coincide with the announcement of an international conference on the topic, which will take place next year, partly hosted by the BMJ and Bond University, where some of the authors are based. It should be noted that the article is not a systematic review of the evidence on screening or on overdiagnosis, but a strong opinion piece that cites research in support of the authors’ argument.Nevertheless, the paper is a useful contribution to the complex debate about how far healthy people should be screened or tested, and how far conditions that may or may not cause harm in the future should be treated. It’s a difficult subject that provokes strongly opposing views among doctors and researchers. For example, a recent paper published in The Lancet argued that everyone over 50 should be given statins because they have been found to reduce the risks of heart attacks even in healthy people.
The article raises a number of concerns about cancer screening in particular, and it should be noted that in the UK the Department of Health announced last October that a full review of the potential risks and benefits of the NHS Breast Cancer Screening Programme is to take place. In terms of cancer screening, much will depend in the future on how far researchers are able to discriminate between ‘harmless’ slow growing cancers that do not need to be treated and those that are more aggressive.
The article should be seen in the context of previous advances in technology and treatments that have brought established benefits in terms of detecting certain conditions early. For example, high blood pressure is symptomless, but it is a recognised risk factor for cardiovascular disease, and there is good research to show that treatment to reduce high blood pressure saves lives.
Overall, the concept of overdiagnosis is one that needs careful consideration, particularly how its potential harms relate to the potential harms of failing to diagnose a disease. Is it better to risk side effects in patients than to risk missing a serious health problem? The issue is perhaps too big to cover in a single article, although this latest opinion paper raises some extremely interesting and thought-provoking points on the issue. Perhaps the key thing now is to look at overdiagnosis on a condition-by-condition basis, for example in the way that alleged overdiagnosis in breast cancer screening is being examined in the UK.
Although there are clearly strong feelings on both sides of the overdiagnosis debate, examinations of the issue should be as comprehensive, objective and evidence-based as possible and focus on specific topics. Overdiagnosis of one condition could be problematic, while it might produce few negative results for other conditions. Next year will see an international conference on the issue of overdiagnosis, which should stimulate both debate and research on this important issue.
Links To The Headlines
Healthy people being harmed by over-diagnosis. The Daily Telegraph, May 30 2012Healthy hit by a plague of over diagnosis of conditions that will never cause serious symptoms. Daily Mail, May 30 2012
Is doctors' fixation on treatment making us ill?. The Independent, May 30 2012
Doctors 'overdiagnosing patients with slow or non-progressive diseases'. Metro, May 30 2012
Links To Science
Moynihan R, Doust J, Henry D. Preventing overdiagnosis: how to stop harming the healthy. BMJ 2012; 344NHS Choices
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