Wednesday, 6 July 2016

Manager and senior nurse of Northamptonshire care home to face conduct hearing over broken windows and ‘scalding’ shower water

Manager and senior nurse of Northamptonshire care home to face conduct hearing over broken windows and ‘scalding’ shower water Two senior staff at a Northamptonshire care home are to face a competency hearing after the premises was found with broken windows and hot taps pouring out scalding water. Northampton Chronicle and Echo

New STI figures show continued increases among gay men

New STI figures show continued increases among gay men Latest figures show there were 434,456 sexually transmitted infections (STIs) reported in England in 2015; 54,275 of which were among gay, bisexual or other men who have sex with men, a 10% increase since 2014. Chlamydia was the most commonly diagnosed STI, accounting for 46% of diagnoses (200,288 cases), followed by genital warts (68,310 cases).

The 2015 statistics represent a small decrease (3%) when compared to 2014. This is primarily due to falls in diagnoses for chlamydia (4%) and genital warts (7%).

However, in the same period there were large increases in diagnoses of gonorrhoea (11%) and syphilis (20%), continuing the rising trends in these infections of the past 5 years. These rises have occurred mostly in gay, bisexual or other men who have sex with men. Public Health England

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Ending the ‘us and them’ mentality – Mark Doughty

Ending the ‘us and them’ mentality – Mark Doughty Patient leader Mark Doughty explains why it is important for NHS leaders to engage patients in care, drawing on experience of The King’s Fund’s collaborative pairs programme: System leaders have talked for years about engaging patients in decisions about the future of health and care services. NHS England

Beyond maternal death: improving the quality of maternal care through national studies of 'near-miss' maternal morbidity

Beyond maternal death: improving the quality of maternal care through national studies of 'near-miss' maternal morbidity Studies of maternal mortality have been shown to result in important improvements to women’s health. It is now recognised that in countries such as the UK, where maternal deaths are rare, the study of near-miss severe maternal morbidity provides additional information to aid disease prevention, treatment and service provision. The study aimed to estimate the incidence of near-miss morbidities; describe different interventions and their impact on outcomes and costs; and compare an external confidential enquiry or a local review approach for investigating the quality of care for affected women. NHS National Institute for Health Research

Antidepressants show greatest increase in number of prescription items dispensed

Antidepressants show greatest increase in number of prescription items dispensed A new report shows that, of all BNF drug categories, prescription items for antidepressants saw the greatest numeric rise in 2015.

The report Prescriptions Dispensed in the Community 2005-20154 shows that the number of antidepressant items prescribed and dispensed in England has more than doubled in the last decade. In 2015, there were 61.0 million antidepressant items prescribed - 31.6 million (107.6 per cent) more than in 2005 and 3.9 million (6.8 per cent) more than in 2014. Health and Social Care Information Centre

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Junior doctor contract 'to be imposed'

Junior doctor contract 'to be imposed' Ministers are paving the way to impose a contract on junior doctors in England after the profession rejected the deal that had been agreed between union negotiators and the government.

British Medical Association members voted 58% to 42% against the deal.

BMA leaders had urged members to accept the terms, which were announced in May after talks with the government resumed following six strikes. BBC News

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Google's DeepMind to peek at NHS eye scans for disease analysis

Google's DeepMind to peek at NHS eye scans for disease analysis One million anonymised eye scans from Moorfields Eye Hospital are to be used to train an artificial intelligence system from Google. BBC News

Meal portion guide reveals 80% of parents overfeed their children

Meal portion guide reveals 80% of parents overfeed their children A meal size guide for children and toddlers has been launched to encourage parents to cut portions, as nutritionists warn more pre-school children are at risk of obesity than ever before.

A survey of 1,000 British parents found that 79 per cent routinely give their children meal portions which are larger than recommended by scientists, the Infant and Toddler Forum revealed. The Independent

Joshua Titcombe father speaks of 'huge relief' at ruling against midwives

Joshua Titcombe father speaks of 'huge relief' at ruling against midwives Lindsey Biggs and Holly Parkinson failed to care properly for baby who died nine days after being born, finds fitness-to-practise panel

The father of a baby boy who died nine days after birth has spoken of his relief at a ruling that two midwives failed in their duty to properly care for him.

Joshua Titcombe died after suffering pneumococcal septicaemia and a lung haemorrhage. Continue reading... The Guardian

Patient 'lay dead' in London A&E for 'hours' before being found as hospital's services branded 'inadequate'

Patient 'lay dead' in London A&E for 'hours' before being found as hospital's services branded 'inadequate' A patient reportedly lay dead for up to four-and-a-half hours before being noticed at a London A&E unit, according to inspectors, who have rated the department's services as "inadequate".

The emergency department at North Middlesex University Hospital, one of London's busiest, has been ordered to make improvements after regulators found that there were not enough doctors to meet demand.

Inspectors with the Care Quality Commission (CQC) rated the hospital's urgent and emergency care services as "inadequate". The Daily Telegraph

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