Tuesday 19 June 2018

Northampton aspires to be 'dementia friendly' town

Northampton aspires to be 'dementia friendly' town Northampton is working towards becoming a ‘dementia friendly town’ with a host of schemes to try to improve the quality of life of those with the debilitating illness.

Bus passes identifying commuters with the condition and where they live if they get confused are part of the proposals, as are ID cards for carers.

The suggestions by Northampton Borough Council’s overview and scrutiny committee were rubber-stamped by cabinet last Wednesday (June 13). Northampton Chronicle and Echo

The 35 medicines no longer available on NHS prescription from this month

The 35 medicines no longer available on NHS prescription from this month 
The NHS has banned free prescriptions for some ‘over the counter’ medicines such as constipation and athletes foot starting this month

NHS England is hoping to free up almost £100 million for frontline care each year by bringing in the changes. Northampton Chronicle and Echo

Press release: HPV vaccine reduces cancer-causing infection by 86 per cent

Press release: HPV vaccine reduces cancer-causing infection by 86 per cent A new study has found that the HPV vaccination has led to major reductions in the number of young women who have the infection, which can cause cervical cancer.Human Papilloma Virus (HPV) 16 and 18 infections, which cause the majority of cervical cancer cases, decreased by 86% in women aged 16 to 21 who were eligible for the vaccination as adolescents between 2010 and 2016.

The surveillance data from England was published today (Monday 18 June 2018) in the Journal of Infectious Diseases. Overall, declines were seen across 5 high-risk HPV types, which together cause around 90% of cervical cancer cases, as well as low-risk HPV types. GOV.UK

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Manual for improving access to psychological therapies

Manual for improving access to psychological therapies NHS England has published a new manual for improving access to psychological therapies (IAPT).

The manual will help commissioners, managers and clinicians expand their local IAPT services while maintaining quality and ensuring that patients receive effective and compassionately delivered care. It provides guidance on setting up and running an efficient IAPT service that achieves good outcomes, and which creates an innovative and supportive environment for staff and clients. It also explains how to use local and national data to improve understanding of the strengths and limitations of a service. NHS Networks

Over half acute trusts now using the NHS e-referral service

Over half acute trusts now using the NHS e-referral service More than 50% of acute hospital trusts in England have switched off paper referrals and are now processing GP referrals for outpatient appointments digitally.

The traditional paper method is currently being phased out across all trusts and from 1 October 2018, providers will no longer be paid for activity which results from referrals that were not made through the NHS e-referral service (e-RS). NHS Networks

Rebuilding my body: breast reconstruction in England

Rebuilding my body: breast reconstruction in England This report compiles evidence from Freedom of Information (FOI) requests conducted by the Breast Cancer Now in 2017. It shows that 47 out of 208 clinical commissioning groups (CCGs) in England (22.6 per cent) have established policies to restrict reconstruction services for non-clinical reasons. With a further nine CCGs (4.3 per cent) having draft policies or informal restrictions in place. The emerging policies – which have been described by the charity as 'totally unacceptable' and 'not in the best interest of patients' – include limiting the number of surgeries women are allowed, enforcing a time-frame on their completion and denying ‘balancing surgery’ to the unaffected breast to achieve symmetry with the reconstruction, resulting in widespread variation in care across England. King's Fund

Listening to our future: early findings from the Health Foundation's Young people's future health inquiry

Listening to our future: early findings from the Health Foundation's Young people's future health inquiry The Health Foundation’s Young people’s future health inquiry is a first-of-its-kind research and engagement project that aims to build an understanding of the influences affecting the future health of young people.This report sets out the initial findings of the engagement work with young people around the United Kingdom. King's Fund

Driving improvement in GP practices

Driving improvement in GP practices To help shine some light on this, we have put this collection of case studies together as a source of information to help general practices improve the quality of care they provide for their patients. These examples represent only a handful of practices that have successfully improved their quality – and therefore their rating – but we know there are many more working tirelessly to improve. Care Quality Commission

Theresa May ready to ditch tax pledges to pay for NHS funding plans

Theresa May ready to ditch tax pledges to pay for NHS funding plans Theresa May is prepared to tear up the Tories’ tax pledges from last year’s general election to pay for her NHS funding plans, as she comes under growing pressure to explain how she will find the money.

Government sources signalled that planned cuts to corporation tax and a pledge to increase the personal income tax allowance to £12,500 a year by 2020 could both be ditched, as could a promise to lift the higher rate threshold to £50,000.

In a speech at the Royal Free hospital in London on Monday, with the chancellor, Philip Hammond, in the audience, the prime minister confirmed the government would set aside an extra £20.5bn a year for the health service by 2023. The Guardian

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Emotional eating 'learned by children not inherited'

Emotional eating 'learned by children not inherited' Children who eat more or less when stressed or upset have learned the behaviour rather than inherited it, a study suggests.

A study by University College London found home environment was the main cause of emotional eating.

And this was due to parental behaviours including giving upset children their favourite food to soothe them.

But eating-disorder charity Beat says parents shouldn't be blamed for children's eating issues.

Emotional eating "indicates an unhealthy relationship to food", said senior lead researcher Dr Clare Llewellyn. BBC News

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Medicinal cannabis review to happen quickly, says Hunt

Medicinal cannabis review to happen quickly, says Hunt There is a need to review how cases for the medical use of cannabis are handled, the prime minister has said.

Theresa May made the comment after a special licence was granted allowing Billy Caldwell, 12, to be treated with cannabis oil for his severe epilepsy. BBC News

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