Thursday 20 July 2023

Kettering General Hospital: Skylark ward shows improvement

Kettering General Hospital: Skylark ward shows improvement An inadequate ward accused of failing children has shown improvement, according to a care regulator's report.

Kettering General Hospital (KGH) in Northamptonshire was warned over its children's and young people's services following an inspection in December.

A new Care Quality Commission (CQC) inspection in April, which did not re-rate the service, found the demands of that warning notice had been met.

The hospital trust's chief executive said she was "extremely proud". BBC Northampton

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The caring penalty

The caring penalty This report outlines how unpaid carers provide a service to society, but argues that they shoulder a financial penalty in doing so. It uses data from Understanding Society and looks at the magnitude, causes, and distribution of the carer pay penalty and how policies can help mitigate it. Joseph Rowntree Foundation

    Data partnerships bring benefit to patients and the NHS

    Data partnerships bring benefit to patients and the NHS The NHS has a long history of data-driven research and innovation. During the pandemic, NHS data enabled us to carry out research at an unprecedented scale and find the world’s first effective treatment for Covid-19, dexamethasone, making it available across every hospital the same day it was approved. NHS data enabled us to not just deliver the first accredited Covid-19 vaccine in the world but to rollout the NHS Covid-19 vaccine programme with a combination of speed and precision unseen elsewhere. NHS England

    Proposed review of the 2023 scheme to control the cost of branded health service medicines

    Proposed review of the 2023 scheme to control the cost of branded health service medicines The government is proposing updates to the statutory scheme to make sure that the scheme can continue to meet its objectives from 2024 onwards, whether this is alongside a successor voluntary scheme or as a standalone scheme in the absence of this. The consultation sets out proposed amendments in three main areas: increasing the allowed growth rate which will have the effect of changing the payment percentages; revising which sales of branded medicines are exempt from scheme payments; and a new approach to control spending on older branded medicines. Department of Health and Social Care

    Senior doctors to stage first strike in a decade

    Senior doctors to stage first strike in a decade A 48-hour strike by senior hospital doctors in England has got under way, with NHS bosses warning of severe disruption.

    Thousands of consultants walked out from 07:00 BST in their dispute over pay.

    It is the first time the consultants have taken part in strike action since 2012.

    Only emergency care and a small amount of routine work- so-called Christmas Day cover - will be provided.

    It comes just two days after a five-day walkout by junior doctors came to an end, on Tuesday. BBC News

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    Row over British Journal of Psychiatry abortion paper saw panel quit

    Row over British Journal of Psychiatry abortion paper saw panel quit An independent panel resigned in a row over controversial research about the impact of abortion on the mental health of women, BBC News can reveal.

    The research, which is still being used in US legal cases about limiting access to abortion, was published in the British Journal of Psychiatry, in 2011.

    Last year the panel, which was set up to investigate complaints about the paper, recommended it be withdrawn.

    But journal-owner, the Royal College of Psychiatrists, overruled it. BBC News

    A nation off-guard: what the UK Covid inquiry has revealed

    A nation off-guard: what the UK Covid inquiry has revealed Some witnesses made tearful apologies; others defiantly denied fault. After six weeks of hearings at the UK Covid-19 public inquiry, the evidence about the UK’s preparedness for the Covid pandemic is in.

    The nation was caught badly off guard. That much was probably obvious. By 1 March 2021 the UK had suffered more than 180 Covid deaths per 100,000 people; in South Korea, the number was just three. But after hearing the evidence, the bereaved families put it bluntly: we were “catastrophically unprepared”. The Guardian

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    Adoption of AI in the NHS should be faster, experts say

    Adoption of AI in the NHS should be faster, experts say The adoption of artificial intelligence (AI) by the NHS should be faster, and more frameworks should be in place to get emerging technologies to as many patients as possible, experts have told MPs.

    A number of senior figures from medicine and biotechnology gave evidence to the Health and Social Care Committee as part of its inquiry into cancer technology. The Independent

    How strong coffee could prevent Alzheimer’s – even if it is in an espresso martini

    How strong coffee could prevent Alzheimer’s – even if it is in an espresso martini Drinking an espresso - even in a cocktail - a day might protect against Alzheimer’s disease, new research has found.

    A study by the University of Verona in Italy showed the dark shot of coffee destroys rogue tau proteins that gather in the brain and kill neurons, a process that is believed to be involved in the onset of the neurodegenerative disease. The Independent

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    UK's dementia hotspots mapped: One in 35 people have incurable disease in parts of country and experts warn rate will double by 2050

    UK's dementia hotspots mapped: One in 35 people have incurable disease in parts of country and experts warn rate will double by 2050 Up to one in 35 people in parts of England are thought to have dementia, according to data crunched into an interactive map by MailOnline.

    Charities estimate approximately 950,000 people across the country suffer with the memory-robbing disorder. Yet experts believe the figure will rocket to an estimated 2million by 2050 as Brits live longer. 

    It comes as scientists have urged officials to hurry in approving game-changing new drugs for Alzheimer's, the most common form of dementia. The Daily Mail