Wednesday 2 July 2014

Future organisation models for the NHS: perspectives for the Dalton Review

Future organisation models for the NHS: perspectives for the Dalton Review Sir David Dalton’s forthcoming review provides a timely opportunity to explore the range of organisational models that providers could use to meet their current strategic and financial challenges. This publication explores some of the organisational options available, including how high-performing NHS organisations might support providers in difficulty. It provides an evidence review and a range of individual perspectives on some of those new organisational arrangements, in health and other sectors, nationally and internationally – in a bid to inform the work of the Dalton review. The individual contributions highlight the benefits and challenges of different organisational models. The King's Fund

Developing a model of mental health self-care support for children and young people

Developing a model of mental health self-care support for children and young people This study looks at the options of self-care support available to children and young people in order to help prevent mental ill-health or speed recovery from it. The study consists of a systematic review of the literature as well as case studies of existing self-care services for mental health in England and Wales. It found that self-care could aid in recovery and that patients and families welcomed the choice and flexibility in self-care services. National Institute for Health Research

PM warns of antibiotic resistance

PM warns of antibiotic resistance Medicine could soon be "cast back into the dark ages" unless action is taken to tackle the growing resistance to antibiotics, David Cameron says. BBC News

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Council-run care 'unsustainable'

Council-run care 'unsustainable' The council-run care system for the elderly and younger adults with disabilities is becoming "unsustainable", social services chiefs are warning. BBC News

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WHO calls emergency Ebola meeting

WHO calls emergency Ebola meeting Health ministers from 11 African countries are meeting in Accra, Ghana, in an attempt to "get a grip" on the deadly and worsening Ebola outbreak. BBC News

SCR reaches 40m patients

SCR reaches 40m patients The NHS Summary Care Record has hit the 40m patient mark, just over a year after low usage rates led to calls for it to be scrapped. E-Health Insider

Emotions manipulated in Facebook study

Emotions manipulated in Facebook study "Facebook made users depressed in secret research," the Mail Online reports. The news comes from a controversial experiment where researchers used the social networking site Facebook to explore the effects of "emotional contagion".

Emotional contagion is when emotional states are transferred between people. For example, if everyone in your office is in a good mood, chances are your own mood will be lifted.

To study its effects, researchers reduced the amount of negative or positive content that appeared in users' newsfeeds to see if this changed their emotional posting behaviour.

The study found when positive emotional content was reduced, people subsequently produced fewer posts containing positive words and more posts containing negative words. The opposite pattern occurred when negative emotional content was reduced.

But the effect sizes in the study were very small – just a few percentage points in terms of changes in the positive or negative terms used by individual users.

More patients surviving major trauma

More patients surviving major trauma New system of care ‘an NHS success story’ OnMedica

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Mental illness treatment needs massive investment. The case is overwhelming

Mental illness treatment needs massive investment. The case is overwhelming Giving greater access to therapies such as CBT is not only the right thing to do it would save the NHS huge sums.

What is the greatest source of misery in our society poverty, unemployment or mental illness? As surveys show, the answer is mental illness. Yet under a third of people with these problems are in treatment. If you break a bone, you receive care automatically, but if your spirit is broken, you do not.

Nearly 40% of all illness in this country is mental illness, but most of it is untreated. It is the greatest injustice in our society and every party's manifesto needs a plan to redress it. The good news is that both depression and chronic anxiety conditions are highly treatable by modern evidence-based psychological therapies such as cognitive behavioural therapy (CBT). Half of the people treated recover fully, and many others improve substantially. After recovery, the chances of relapse are much reduced; many patients say they feel reborn. Continue reading... The Guardian

Third baby death linked to contaminated hospital drip

Third baby death linked to contaminated hospital drip Health officials say 23 infants have now suffered infections after receiving liquid nutrition feed supplied by a private company to NHS hospitals. The Daily Telegraph

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Dementia sufferers are ‘cut adrift’ after diagnosis warning

Dementia sufferers are ‘cut adrift’ after diagnosis warning Dementia patients are being “cut adrift” after diagnosis, a charity has warned, with one patient claiming they received no more support than if they had been suffering tonsillitis. The Independent

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Britain prepared to pay more tax to support the NHS, poll finds

Britain prepared to pay more tax to support the NHS, poll finds A majority of people are ready to pay more tax to safeguard the NHS and head off a looming financial crisis, according to a ComRes survey for The Independent.