Tuesday 26 July 2016

Foxhill Manor care home: Did CQC rating mean it had to close?

Foxhill Manor care home: Did CQC rating mean it had to close? Shut in 2014 following a damning Care Quality Commission report, Foxhill Manor offered "placements of last resort" to dementia and mental health patients. Could it have been saved and what does the Foxhill story tell us about the state of modern care? BBC Northampton

Clinical network develops tool for better children’s services

Clinical network develops tool for better children’s services A toolkit for providers and guidance for commissioners to improve care and outcomes for children, young people and their families. Children and young people across the region were involved in development of the resource. Yorkshire and Humber Clinical Networks

English language requirements for public sector workers published

English language requirements for public sector workers published The Immigration Act 2016 creates a duty for employers to ensure that all public sector staff working in customer-facing roles speak English to an appropriate standard. To support employers to meet their obligations the government has published an early draft of the code of practice. NHS Employers

Working with epilepsy and homelessness: guidance for community nurses

Working with epilepsy and homelessness: guidance for community nurses This guidance is aimed at community nurses and it provides advice on how to support people who are homeless and who have epilepsy. It covers the specific risks and needs of people who are homeless and includes useful advice nurses to enable nurses to support patients with epilepsy and give practical advice for coordinating their care. The Queen's Nursing Institute

Local empowerment: how to achieve a sustainable health service

Local empowerment: how to achieve a sustainable health service This report, sponsored by KPMG, recommends that local areas should negotiate health devolution deals directly with the government to empower local leaders to drive integration, transformation and financial sustainability in their local health and care economies. . It argues that much more NHS funding should be raised and controlled locally with local NHS and local government leaders devolved total control of their entire local health budget. Correspondingly local areas should be increasingly free of central government control and direction, with greater local flexibilities. Localis

NHS faces 'compensation time bomb' as clinical negligence liabilities double

NHS faces 'compensation time bomb' as clinical negligence liabilities double Medico-legal organisations have warned of a ticking time bomb on medical indemnity after the NHS Litigation Authority (NHSLA) announced clinical negligence liability for hospitals almost doubled to £56bn last year. GP Online

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Week-long waiting times to see a GP could rise sharply

Week-long waiting times to see a GP could rise sharply Numbers of patients who will have to wait more than one week to see their GP could rise by 40% over the next few years if the government fails to implement its promises to increase support for general practice, claims the RCGP.

The college released details of its analysis at the weekend which concluded that the number of occasions when patients will have to wait longer than a week to see their GP could increase from the 69 million occasions it happened in 2015-16 to 98 million in 2020-21.

The analysis was carried out into NHS England’s GP Patient survey published earlier this month. OnMedica

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Spain reports first case of baby born with microcephaly after mother contracts Zika virus

Spain reports first case of baby born with microcephaly after mother contracts Zika virus Spain has recorded the first European case of a baby born with Zika-related birth defects.

Though dozens of people across the continent are known to have contracted the virus, usually after having travelled in the affected South American countries, but this is the first time a baby has been in born to a mother carrying the virus in Europe. The Independent

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Kate Granger inspired all of us in the NHS to be more compassionate

Kate Granger inspired all of us in the NHS to be more compassionate With her #hellomynameis campaign, Kate reminded me that if I lose my humanity, I am a shadow of the doctor I should be

He’d been rushed the day before to our surgical emergency unit. An elderly man, crying out in pain, he’d looked haggard, gaunt and frightened as we wheeled him straight to the CT scanner. Now, stripped of his clothes and draped in a gown, he stared up in trepidation as my consultant surgeon, impatient to be done with his morning ward round, stopped by the bedside. Without so much as an introduction, this experienced doctor broke the news to the patient of his terminal illness by turning to the bedside entourage and muttering, perfectly audibly: “Get a palliative care nurse to come and see him.” No one had even told “him” he had cancer.

As panic began to rise in my patient’s face, I remember catching the ward sister’s eye to see her cringing alongside me. The ward round had already swept on. I felt sick, complicit in something barbaric. But, as an inexperienced house officer barely qualified as a doctor, I scuttled dutifully after my boss, leaving someone else to pick up the pieces. Continue reading... The Guardian

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Children 'going blind and risk dying from cancer' as doctors overlook crucial NF1 signs

Children 'going blind and risk dying from cancer' as doctors overlook crucial NF1 signs Despite being more common than cystic fibrosis and being linked to a number of serious complications, the incurable condition neurofibromatosis (NF1) is not checked for in infancy. The Daily Mail

NHS chief launched cover-up after surgeon operated on wrong finger because he 'did not know his right from his left', tribunal hears

NHS chief launched cover-up after surgeon operated on wrong finger because he 'did not know his right from his left', tribunal hears An NHS chief staged a cover-up after a surgeon operated on the wrong finger of a patient because he “did not know his right from his left”, a tribunal heard.

Rachel Sansbury, head of nursing for the surgical division at Lancashire Teaching Hospital NHS Foundation Trust, is said to have told a member of staff that revealing that the surgeon had a condition affecting his co-ordination could stop him operating, lengthening waiting lists.

Mrs Sansbury, who faces six charges relating to dishonestly asking colleagues to conceal or misrepresent the performance of the trust, allegedly also told staff who raised concerns about incidents going unreported not to “open that can of worms”. The Daily Telegraph

Mother claims she has to restrain mentally-ill son, 24, with handcuffs due to 'lack of support from NHS'

Mother claims she has to restrain mentally-ill son, 24, with handcuffs due to 'lack of support from NHS' A mother claims she has to put her mentally-ill son in handcuffs at home because of a lack of support from mental health services.

Joely Hignett alleges she has to physically restrain 24-year-old son Kyle Hignett - who has a borderline personality disorder and suffers from psychosis - to stop him from harming himself or others.

The 44-year-old mother of two, from Warrington, Cheshire, has released "distressing" footage of Kyle sobbing and screaming to raise awareness of his condition and said she feels "let down" by the mental health system. The Daily Telegraph