All Health Service Journal articles in 2000-11-16

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  • News

    WEB WATCH

    2000-11-16T00:00:00Z

    Where do the media get all those clinical research stories from - and why do so many medical breakthroughs occur on a Friday?

  • News

    in person

    2000-11-16T00:00:00Z

    Dr Paulene Pearson has been elected chair of the 18,000-strong Community Practitioners and Health Vistors Association. She takes over from Denise Campbell who stands down after two years in the post.

  • News

    Where are they now?

    2000-11-16T00:00:00Z

    What motivates people to join the NHS, sometimes taking a 50 per cent pay cut in the process? Five years ago HSJ talked to a group of new entrants about their aspirations. Joanna Lyall finds out how three of them have fared

  • News

    Wealth of non-disease specific organisations

    2000-11-16T00:00:00Z

    Letters

  • News

    monitor

    2000-11-16T00:00:00Z

    With greatness comes humility. And with humility greatness. And so it was that John Denham, minister of health, happiness and downright bonhomie showed his worth. Monitor salutes you, Mr Denham, and apologises from the bottom of his heart.

  • News

    Money talks

    2000-11-16T00:00:00Z

    In our occasional series profiling people in contrasting roles, Ann Dix quizzes two finance directors - one in a whole-service trust, the other in a PCT

  • News

    Water jump

    2000-11-16T00:00:00Z

    Ann Lloyd used to be a hydrologist, but the new director of the NHS in Wales has long had the health service flowing through her veins. Tash Shifrin reports

  • News

    Job's worth

    2000-11-16T00:00:00Z

    Legal pitfalls over employment law await primary care trusts. Alison Moore looks at the human resources implications for these large employers

  • News

    Under the influence

    2000-11-16T00:00:00Z

    Health consumer groups have more opportunities to influence national policy, yet they see providing advice and support as more important. Kathryn Jones and colleagues find out why

  • News

    Nosocomial infections - worse than it looks

    2000-11-16T00:00:00Z

    Letters

  • News

    How it works

    2000-11-16T00:00:00Z

    In mediation, three rooms are normally booked in a hotel or conference centre convenient to the parties. There is one room for each party and one central room, called the caucus, where each party can address the other over a table.

  • News

    The high price of success

    2000-11-16T00:00:00Z

    Some GPs may be stigmatised as 'problem prescribers', but one presentation at the conference showed how following national guidelines by prescribing treatments which have accepted benefits for patients can threaten drugs budgets.

  • News

    The heart of the matter: Oxford Radcliffe Hospital trust

    2000-11-16T00:00:00Z

    Every inquiry is different. But classic ingredients appear to include at least one whistleblower, a culture of secrecy, and previous internal inquiries which have failed to bring about sufficient action.

  • News

    Nursing a grievance on a wing and a prayer

    2000-11-16T00:00:00Z

    I took a call at the office on Sunday night from a Downing Street official who was keen to persuade me to write about the scale of investment which the government's three years of economic virtue have made possible.

  • News

    The go-between

    2000-11-16T00:00:00Z

    Remuneration and a settlement won't always heal the wounds. Danny Lee looks at the reasons why mediation is seen as a more humane and less damaging way to deal with negligence claims

  • News

    Pivotal role in the NHS's proactive future

    2000-11-16T00:00:00Z

    Letters

  • News

    Wight funding worries persist as single HA follows merger

    2000-11-16T00:00:00Z

    A single health authority covering south-east Hampshire and the Isle of Wight will come into being on 1 April, following the go-ahead for a merger of the existing authorities by junior health minister Gisela Stuart.

  • News

    Hamburger fills role with relish

    2000-11-16T00:00:00Z

    At the age of 86 Sir Sydney Hamburger is back at work in the NHS - as its oldest employee. Sir Sydney, who chaired the former North West regional health authority from its inception in 1974 until 1982, has agreed to become non-executive director of the board of mental health ...