Thursday, 25 August 2022

Northampton and Kettering general hospitals shortlisted for national award for technology use

Northampton and Kettering general hospitals shortlisted for national award for technology use Northampton and Kettering general hospitals have been shortlisted for a national award for their use of technology to better support frail patients.

The University Hospitals of Northamptonshire NHS Group (UHN) is a finalist in the Health Service Journal (HSJ) Patient Safety Awards 2022 in the Digital System and Process Development Award category. Northamptonshire Telegraph

Union tables claim to increase pay rise offered by Northampton mental health hospital

Union tables claim to increase pay rise offered by Northampton mental health hospital A union representing workers at St Andrew’s Healthcare in Northampton has tabled a claim to improve the pay increase offer.

UNISON has formally proposed that St Andrew's employees receive either a £2,000 rise at all career levels or the current rate of Retail Price Index (RPI) - presently 11.8 percent - whichever is higher. Northampton Chronicle and Echo

More than 1,400 people in Northamptonshire given specialist Covid medication

More than 1,400 people in Northamptonshire given specialist Covid medication More than 1,400 county residents at risk of serious illness or death from Covid-19 have been treated with antiviral and other specialist medications by Northamptonshire’s hospitals after testing positive for the virus.

Northampton and Kettering General Hospitals have both been providing the treatments – either as tablets or intravenous infusions – as part of the national network of Covid Medicines Delivery Units (CMDUs) set up in December 2021. Northants Live

The continuing impact of Covid-19 on health and inequalities

The continuing impact of Covid-19 on health and inequalities A year on from publication of the Health Foundation’s impact inquiry, inequalities in COVID-19 mortality persist with mortality rates 3 to 4 times higher in the most deprived areas. However, the overall number of COVID-19 deaths is now significantly lower than it was during the first year of the pandemic. The Health Foundation

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Next steps for continuity of care: practical learning in light of the Fuller report

 Next steps for continuity of care: practical learning in light of the Fuller report General practice is facing significant and multiple challenges, driven by a perfect storm of COVID-19, GP shortages and workload pressures. The impact on patients is obvious – and this is reflected in dramatically falling satisfaction levels.

The recent Fuller report offered a clear vision of the future primary care system, including the fundamental ingredients that need to stay, where change needs to happen and what can enable that change. The Health Foundation

There’s no such thing as a new public policy idea, just a new name

There’s no such thing as a new public policy idea, just a new name Those of us who have been at the policy and implementation game for a while can be forgiven for thinking that there are few genuinely new ideas in public policy. Instead, the policy pendulum swings between solutions that are implemented, discarded for something better (or more accurately, something that is just different), and then reintroduced with a different name sometime later. The King's Fund

How are we doing? A coproduced approach to tracking young Black men’s experiences of community wellbeing and mental health programmes

How are we doing? A coproduced approach to tracking young Black men’s experiences of community wellbeing and mental health programmes There are few culturally relevant tools focusing on young Black men’s mental health outcomes. Using approaches that lack cultural sensitivity limit services’ ability to know whether they are working well, and can lead to mistrust and disengagement. Funded by Mind, this report from the Centre for Mental Health looks at how they designed a new, culturally informed approach to monitoring young Black men’s outcomes for accessing wellbeing support — Culturally appropriate evaluation for young Black men. It was coproduced with young Black men to identify what impact a service has on their mental health and wellbeing. Community wellbeing and mental health programmes are being asked to pilot the tool, to help determine its effectiveness.

    Regular asymptomatic testing paused in additional settings

    Regular asymptomatic testing paused in additional settings Regular asymptomatic testing for Covid in all remaining settings in England will be paused from 31 August, as Covid cases continue to fall.

    Free testing for the public ended on 1 April as part of the government’s Living with Covid plan, but asymptomatic testing continued to be used in some settings during periods of high case rates. Department of Health and Social Care

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    Tory leadership: Rishi Sunak criticises government Covid response

    Tory leadership: Rishi Sunak criticises government Covid response Rishi Sunak has criticised the government's response to Covid - suggesting independent scientific advisers were given too much authority.

    Mr Sunak - chancellor in the pandemic - told the Spectator magazine there had not been enough discussion about the negative side-effects of lockdowns.

    He said he had felt "emotional" when he argued to keep schools in England open. BBC News

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    Liz Truss plan to divert NHS funds to social care is ‘robbing Peter to pay Paul’

    Liz Truss plan to divert NHS funds to social care is ‘robbing Peter to pay Paul’ Liz Truss would be “robbing Peter to pay Paul” if she diverted £13bn of funding for the NHS to deal with a Covid backlog in social care, experts have said.

    The Conservative leadership frontrunner told a hustings on Tuesday night that she would spend the £13bn earmarked for the NHS to catch up on delayed treatment after Covid on social care instead. The Guardian

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    NHS 111 cyber attack still affecting GPs three weeks after start of outage

    NHS 111 cyber attack still affecting GPs three weeks after start of outage GP practices are still being affected by the recent cyber incident affecting NHS 111, despite assurances a solution was ‘days’ away two weeks ago.

    One GP practice was told their CPR training was being cancelled due to 111 ‘capacity issues’ with the IT outage, which affects the Adastra system used by 111 services and hosted by Advanced.

    And NHS England has said that software being taken offline is impacting 111 referrals to GP practices and through GP access hubs. Pulse

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    Doom-scrollers are more likely to suffer from stress and anxiety, study finds

    Doom-scrollers are more likely to suffer from stress and anxiety, study finds One in six people are 'doom scrollers', a study suggests.

    The term gained popularity in 2020 during the Covid pandemic and 2020 US presidential election and refers to people who obsessively follow negative news.

    Researchers analysed data from an online survey of 1,100 adults who were asked about their news consumption habits and stress and anxiety levels. The Daily Mail

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    Analysis suggests 500 Brits are dying every WEEK due to ambulance delays and A&E waits

    Analysis suggests 500 Brits are dying every WEEK due to ambulance delays and A&E waits As many as 500 people are dying every week in England because of the crisis in NHS emergency departments, according to analysis.

    A&E performance has plummeted to its worst ever level over recent months with patients waiting up to 40 hours for a bed, while the sick are facing near-record waits for ambulances.

    So far in 2022, there have been over 11,000 'excess deaths' — the number of fatalities above the five-year average, which is a marker of how many are expected. The Daily Mail

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    Scientists may have found way to clear the brain of toxic chemicals responsible for Alzheimer's

    Scientists may have found way to clear the brain of toxic chemicals responsible for Alzheimer's A research team may have found a new way to clear harmful proteins in the brain that trigger cognitive diseases like Alzheimer's and Parkinson's, opening the door for new treatments for the devastating conditions. 

    Experts believe that Alzheimer's is triggered by amyloid beta proteins building up in the brain and clumping together, triggering tell-tale symptoms such as memory loss and loss of general cognitive function. The Daily Mail

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