Friday 24 June 2022

Cervical Screening Awareness Week: Figures show one in three Northamptonshire are not having smear tests

Cervical Screening Awareness Week: Figures show one in three Northamptonshire are not having smear tests Nearly one in three Northamptonshire women are regularly skipping routine smear tests which can detect early stages of cancer.

Charity Jo's Cervical Cancer Trust believes many are avoiding the straightforward procedures through fear, embarrassment, or a lack of understanding of what they involve. Northamptonshire Telegraph

Northampton General: New critical care unit prepares for first patients

Northampton General: New critical care unit prepares for first patients A new critical care unit, designed with the experience of the Covid pandemic, is preparing for its first referrals.

The 16-bed unit at Northampton General Hospital cost £15.9m and will offer round-the-clock care for the most vulnerable patients.

It includes special isolation rooms as well as space for relatives to stay and sleep close to loved ones. BBC Northampton

Hormone replacement therapy prescriptions rise 42% in one year

Hormone replacement therapy prescriptions rise 42% in one year Shortages of hormone replacement therapy products have been in the news recently, and the number of prescription items in England related to HRT have doubled over the last seven years. John Appleby shows how a large part of this increase was during 2021/22. Nuffield Trust

Changing lives, changing places, changing systems: making progress on social prescribing

Changing lives, changing places, changing systems: making progress on social prescribing This report explores what needs to happen to engage a wider set of stakeholders with planning, funding and delivering social prescribing services and the community activities, groups and services upon which they rely across places and within new Integrated Care Systems. It explores the structures needed to support collaborative planning and delivery and how improving data flows could encourage more partners to get involved. It also describes how communication about social prescribing can be improved to make clearer how it fits into wider plans for transforming health and care across communities and supporting people to improve their health and wellbeing. National Voices

    Interim bulletin: harm caused by delays in transferring patients to the right place of care

    Interim bulletin: harm caused by delays in transferring patients to the right place of care This investigation explores issues around patient handover to emergency care. This bulletin outlines early investigation findings and recommends a national response to tackle this issue. Findings so far emphasise that an effective response should consider the interactions of the whole system: an end-to-end approach that does not just focus on one area of health care and prioritises patient safety. Healthcare Safety Investigation Branch

      Re:Birth summary report

      Re:Birth summary report This project worked with representatives from across maternity care, including staff, advocacy groups and service users. It advises that midwives and obstetricians put the needs and wishes of women at the heart of all conversations about their care. The report recommends that maternity staff should follow the five As: acknowledge, ask, affirm, avoid and annotate. Royal College of Midwives

        National flu and COVID-19 surveillance reports published

        National flu and COVID-19 surveillance reports published Weekly national influenza and coronavirus (COVID-19) report, COVID-19 activity, seasonal flu and other seasonal respiratory illnesses.  UK Health Security Agency

        Increase in hepatitis (liver inflammation) cases in children under investigation

        Increase in hepatitis (liver inflammation) cases in children under investigation The UK Health Security Agency is continuing to investigate and confirm cases of sudden onset hepatitis in children aged 10 and under that have been identified since January 2022.

        Working alongside Public Health Scotland, Public Health Wales and the Public Health Agency, active investigations have identified a further 7 confirmed cases since the last update on 17 June, bringing the total number of confirmed cases in the UK to 258, as of 21 June.

        Birmingham hospital faces criminal probe after death of vulnerable man

        Birmingham hospital faces criminal probe after death of vulnerable man A hospital and one of its managers are facing a criminal investigation into the death of a vulnerable man who absconded by climbing a fence.

        An inquest concluded failings amounting to neglect contributed to the death of Matthew Caseby in 2020, after he fled from Birmingham's Priory Hospital Woodbourne and was hit by a train.

        The investigation will be carried out by the Care Quality Commission (CQC). BBC News

        100,000s of children not fully vaccinated against polio, figures show

        100,000s of children not fully vaccinated against polio, figures show Thousands of children across England are not fully protected against polio, with booster uptake lagging by 50 per cent in some parts of the country, government data show.

        Some 101,737 children had not received a booster jab by their fifth birthday in 2020/21, out of a total of 693,928. Around a third of all these unprotected five-year-olds (34,105) were in London. The Independent

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        NHS unions warn of industrial unrest over expected 3% pay rise

        NHS unions warn of industrial unrest over expected 3% pay rise Ministers are likely to face a fresh outbreak of industrial unrest if, as expected, the government accepts a well-below inflation pay rise for NHS workers, unions and professional groups have warned.

        Even if there are no strikes over a pay offer at around the expected 3% level, some said another cut in real-terms pay coupled with staff shortages and the legacy of Covid could simply prompt an exodus of workers, with one official calling the situation “a perfect storm for the NHS”. The Guardian

        NHS hospital failed to disclose babies’ deadly bacteria infections

        NHS hospital failed to disclose babies’ deadly bacteria infections A leading NHS hospital failed to publicly disclose that four very ill premature babies in its care were infected with a deadly bacterium, one of whom died soon after, the Guardian can reveal.

        St Thomas’ hospital did not admit publicly that it had suffered an outbreak of Bacillus cereus in the neonatal intensive care unit (NICU) of its Evelina children’s hospital in late 2013 and early 2014.

        Did not acknowledge either the incident or infant’s death in any public forum. The Guardian

        COVID-19 jab saved 20 million lives in its first year, study suggests

        COVID-19 jab saved 20 million lives in its first year, study suggests About 20 million lives were saved by the COVID vaccine in its first year, according to new estimates.

        Experts believe more deaths were prevented in richer countries, with 12.2 million saved in high and upper-middle income nations. Sky News

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