Monday, 4 September 2017

Almost 100 people in Northants have died in past decade while waiting for an organ transplant

Almost 100 people in Northants have died in past decade while waiting for an organ transplant New figures show 89 people in Northamptonshire have died on the waiting list for an organ transplant over the past 10 years.

NHS Blood and Transplant revealed the tragic number of deaths to mark Organ Donation Week (September 4 to 10) and is now urging people to tell their families they want to become donors. Northampton Chronicle and Echo

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CCG reveals options for future of Corby’s Urgent Care Centre

CCG reveals options for future of Corby’s Urgent Care Centre Corby CCG has revealed the options for the future of the town’s urgent care centre, which it will decide upon next week.

An extraordinary meeting has been called for Tuesday (August 8) where health officials will make a decision on provision at the site in Cottingham Road beyond September 30. The current contract with operators Lakeside+ ends then, with Lakeside declining to take on a new contract because it says the CCG is not offering enough money and no other bidders coming forward.

Now the options for October 1 onwards have been revealed. Northamptonshire Telegraph

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Getting serious about public mental health

Getting serious about public mental health Ten years ago, as a student of public health, I remember feeling surprised that mental health didn’t feature more prominently on the syllabus. It struck me then, as it does now, that many of the big issues in public health can be seen to some extent as visible symptoms of deeper causes related to psychological wellbeing. Obesity, smoking, and alcohol and substance abuse are all strongly associated with poor mental health. And yet public mental health appeared to be considered a niche interest. The King's Fund

Patient safety will be risked this winter without immediate funding and capacity boost for the NHS

Patient safety will be risked this winter without immediate funding and capacity boost for the NHS Time is running out for local health services to be given the extra funding and capacity to fully protect patients this winter.

As the NHS faces up to another tough winter, NHS Providers, the organisation that represents 97% of hospital, mental health, community and ambulance service trusts in England, is calling for an immediate emergency cash injection of between £200 and £350 million to enable the NHS to manage patient safety risk this winter.

Failure to make this investment will lead to lengthening waiting times for patients in A&E and other services and will also put the safety of patients at risk as local trusts have insufficient capacity to meet extra expected demand. The extra funding is needed to complement other work currently being undertaken to improve the NHS’ state of readiness for this winter. NHS Providers

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Press release: 1 in 10 men aged 50 have a heart age 10 years older than they are

Press release: 1 in 10 men aged 50 have a heart age 10 years older than they are Heart Age Test is the only known way of measuring our heart age, which shows how many years we can expect to live healthily without a heart attack or stroke. The higher our heart age, the higher our risk.

Analysis of 1.2 million tesr results shows the majority of people (64%) with a heart 10 years older than their actual age are male.

Every month, 7,400 people die from heart disease or stroke. A quarter of deaths are of people under 75 and most of these can be prevented.

Public Health England’s campaign is leading the way in addressing how people think about their heart health, encouraging them to be as familiar with their heart age as they are with their weight or height.

Market shaping in adult social care

Market shaping in adult social care The last five years have seen a reduction in the number of residential and nursing homes operating in England resulting in 1,400 fewer homes. The long-term trend of increasing numbers of nursing home beds and decreasing numbers of residential home beds has come to a halt. This analysis highlights the fragility of the care home market, although the home care market is equally under pressure. It argues that local authorities must be prepared to be bolder and do things differently in order to shape the market. Institute of Public Care

Organ donors should let family know of intensions, says NHS

Organ donors should let family know of intensions, says NHS More than 450 relatives of organ donors declined permission to donate as they were unsure of their relatives' wishes in 2016, figures have shown.

NHS Blood and Transplant (NHSBT) says families are reluctant to give their loved one's organs to patients.

Last year, 457 people died while on the active transplant waiting list, and currently there are 6,414 patients waiting for organs.

NHSBT says donors should ensure they have told relatives of their wishes. BBC News

Is it any wonder the NHS is struggling to recruit homegrown GPs when their job has been reduced to little more than delivering bad news?

Is it any wonder the NHS is struggling to recruit homegrown GPs when their job has been reduced to little more than delivering bad news? As the NHS launches a £100m drive to recruit foreign GPs, it’s hard to know what to think. Perhaps we should feel hopeful that a seemingly positive step has been taken to help with the current GP crisis in the UK. Maybe it will instil some hope in the smiling Jeremy Hunt who has appeared, of late, to be far busier arguing with one of the world’s most respected scientific minds than doing what we are desperate for him to do – fix the NHS.

Or perhaps, conversely, the latest step by the NHS to try to plug one of its many gaps serves to remind us of exactly how dire the situation is. So dire that it’s becoming increasingly difficult to recruit GPs to the thankless, underfunded task they face. The Independent

Let's fight the stigma around ageing and frailtyman

Let's fight the stigma around ageing and frailty Focusing on the physical deficits of old age means we are not paying enough attention to other aspects of health and wellbeing

There needs to be a radical shift in how frailty is presented as a health and social care issue. Last year, a senior NHS clinician wrote the following on the importance of diagnosing frailty:

Frailty remains an easy condition to recognise. Today, however, there are far greater numbers of older people than ever before, and while frailty can develop throughout adult life the numbers of older people living with the condition has increased substantially. With a highly developed healthcare system supporting us to later life, we should not be surprised when frailty declares itself as a health or social care crisis.

By pursuing an over-medicalised approach to frailty, we are in danger of ignoring other aspects of a person’s wellbeing. Continue reading... The Guardian

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Antidepressants work, so why do we shame people for taking them?

Antidepressants work, so why do we shame people for taking them? A new mega-analysis has found in favour of SSRIs. Time to give people who take them a break

British society just cannot get comfortable with the reality of medication for depression. Despite widespread use, they still attract disapproval. New research appears to strike a decisive blow against widely publicised claims that antidepressant medications such as Prozac, a selective serotonin reuptake inhibitor (SSRI) are no better than sugar pills for people with depression.

Elias Eriksson, professor of pharmacology at the University of Gothenburg and one of the authors of the new paper, said: “I think, once and for all, we’ve answered the SSRI question. SSRIs work. They may not work for every patient, but they work for most patients. And it’s a pity if their use is discouraged because of newspaper reports.”

We are invested in the idea of a grand conspiracy … an industry dampening human responses to reality for profit Continue reading... The Guardian

Expert demands urgent probe into 'avoidable' fatalities

Expert demands urgent probe into 'avoidable' fatalities The NHS has covered up thousands of ‘suspect’ deaths in hospitals across England, sparking calls for an urgent inquiry, The Mail on Sunday can reveal.

According to the expert who helped to expose the Mid-Staffordshire hospitals scandal – where hundreds died due to poor care – health chiefs have systematically excluded up to 19,000 ‘unexpected’ deaths from official statistics over the past five years.

Professor Sir Brian Jarman says his shocking findings mean there are dozens of ‘potentially unsafe’ hospitals that should be investigated over high death rates, but which are being overlooked.

Last night, Liberal Democrat Health spokesman Norman Lamb demanded that Health Secretary Jeremy Hunt look into the claims as a matter of urgency. The Daily Mail