Monday 14 November 2022

KGH nurse and midwife receive Daisy Awards for outstanding care

KGH nurse and midwife receive Daisy Awards for outstanding care A nurse and a midwife from Kettering General Hospital have received DAISY Awards for the outstanding, compassionate and sensitive care they have delivered.

Deputy Sister, Amber Dicks, and community midwife, Alice Stillgoe (nee Macfarlane) were nominated for their awards by patients or their families. Northamptonshire Telegraph

COP27 is a reminder of the NHS’s vital role in addressing climate change

COP27 is a reminder of the NHS’s vital role in addressing climate change With 7 million people waiting for NHS treatment, extreme pressures on emergency services and severe workforce shortages, COP27 may seem far removed from the NHS’s immediate challenges. But health care’s role in addressing climate change is essential – and action can’t wait. The Health Foundation

The key reasons why Rishi Sunak should press ahead with the cap on social care costs

The key reasons why Rishi Sunak should press ahead with the cap on social care costs One immediate question facing the Prime Minister Rishi Sunak is whether to press ahead with plans put in train by former Prime Minister Boris Johnson to introduce a cap on the social care costs people are liable for during their lifetime. The King's Fund

Cardiovascular disease in England: supporting leaders to take actions

Cardiovascular disease in England: supporting leaders to take actions Cardiovascular disease (CVD) is largely preventable. The risk factors for CVD apply also to other major conditions such as cancer, dementia and diabetes. Preventing and managing CVD and its risk factors therefore has the potential to improve population health, reduce health inequalities and ease pressures on overstretched health and care systems by reducing demand for services. This report aims to inform and support national and local leaders to take action to accelerate progress on tackling CVD. The King's Fund

Lessons learned to inform maternity care from the UK and Ireland Confidential Enquiries into Maternal Deaths and Morbidity 2018-20

Lessons learned to inform maternity care from the UK and Ireland Confidential Enquiries into Maternal Deaths and Morbidity 2018-20 This report finds that pregnancy remains very safe in the UK. In 2017-2019 191 women, of the 2,173,810 giving birth, died during or up to six weeks after pregnancy; 495 during or up to one year after their pregnancy. This is a small, but not statistically significant, decrease in the overall maternal death rate. It outlines a need for recognition that women can be placed at additional risk by clinician behaviours which focus on concerns over a woman’s pregnancy rather than concerns over a woman herself. It also highlight the gaps that remain in mortality rates between women from deprived and affluent areas, women of different ages and women from different ethnic groups. MBRRACE-UK

    National standards for healthcare food and drink

    National standards for healthcare food and drink Every healthcare organisation has a responsibility to provide the highest level of care possible for their patients, staff and visitors. This includes the quality, nutritional value and the sustainable aspects of the food and drink that is served, as well as the overall experience and environment in which it is eaten. NHS England

    Have I dodged Covid and what does it mean?

    Have I dodged Covid and what does it mean? I hope this vial of blood contains answers because I have a nagging question - have I managed to dodge Covid?

    It seems remarkable that anyone could. The virus has swept the world since it emerged in China nearly three years ago. Fresh variants have become better and better at infecting us. Even vaccines make Covid milder rather than being an impenetrable shield. BBC News

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    Disability and the cost of living: 'It's our son's life'

    Disability and the cost of living: 'It's our son's life' Six-year-old Cohen survives off the machines in his home and his mum's energy bills could rise to more than £3,000 a year.

    Cohen has DiGeorge syndrome and 15q11.2 genetic deletions which means he can't walk, talk or digest food properly.

    Lauren, Cohen's mum said: "The cost of living crisis, for most people, it’s 'Oh we just won’t go on holiday this year' but for us it’s our son’s life." BBC News

    Thousands more NHS workers being balloted for strike action, Unite union says

    Thousands more NHS workers being balloted for strike action, Unite union says NHS workers in roles such as blood and transplant services are among nearly 10,000 people being balloted over action that could see them walk off the job as soon as January.

    Unite union, which represents 100,000 NHS workers, said voting papers are going out across 36 NHS trusts and organisations in England and Wales. Sky News

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    Up to one in three English hospital beds occupied by patients fit for discharge

    Up to one in three English hospital beds occupied by patients fit for discharge As many as one in three hospital beds in parts of England are occupied by patients who are well enough to be discharged, with a chronic lack of social care meaning many do not have suitable places to go.

    Guardian analysis of official data shows that on average 13,600 beds across NHS England are occupied every day with patients who doctors say are medically fit to go home or to a care home, equivalent to one in seven beds in acute hospitals in October. The Guardian

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    Controversial £360m NHS England data platform ‘lined up’ for Trump backer’s firm

    Controversial £360m NHS England data platform ‘lined up’ for Trump backer’s firm Patients will have no say over records going to Palantir, the software giant run by billionaire Republican backer

    An NHS project to incorporate tens of millions of personal digital medical records into one of the biggest health data platforms in the world is to be launched without seeking new patient consent.

    Health officials confirmed this weekend the proposed £360m new data platform for England will incorporate the NHS shared care records that track patients across the health and care system. The Guardian

    Advising older patients against breast cancer surgery is ‘age bias’, UK study finds

    Advising older patients against breast cancer surgery is ‘age bias’, UK study finds Doctors may be steering older women away from certain breast cancer treatments due to “well-meaning but misplaced beliefs” about their preferences and fitness to undergo surgery, a study suggests. The Guardian

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    Sperm donor babies are just as health as those conceived conventionally, study finds

    Sperm donor babies are just as health as those conceived conventionally, study finds Babies born with the help of a sperm donor are just as healthy as those conceived conventionally with a male partner, according to the largest study of its kind.

    The research even showed that sperm-donor babies are actually at lower risk of being born premature or underweight. The Daily Mail