Acute Care – Page 478

  • News

    Cumbria and Lancashire CATS contract goes to consultation

    2006-11-23T11:26:43Z

    A contract to allow healthcare company Netcare to provide clinical assessment and treatment services (CATS) across Cumbria and Lancashire has been delayed after local primary care trusts decided to consult on some details.

  • News

    Joint health and social care regulation body delayed as plans are left out of Queen's Speech

    2006-11-23T11:24:36Z

    The merger of the health and social care inspectorates looks set to be delayed by at least six months following the absence of a bill to implement it in the Queen's Speech.

  • Comment

    Listening to complaints

    2006-11-20T11:58:20Z

    David Lee's article on listening to complaints was engaging. What would have been really useful is a sense of what has actually changed in the day-to-day operation of services and the impact on patient care, efficiency and staff relations.

  • Comment

    Back to the wards

    2006-11-20T11:51:20Z

    A selection of reader responses about our story on senior nurses going 'back to the wards' to save trusts money

  • HSJ Knowledge

    GM Live 2: new dates coming

    2006-11-20T10:45:57Z

    It's always good to look up old friends. How have they changed? What's better? What's worse? Over the coming months in this HSJGood Management Live gateway we will look at the progress the hosts of the first series of events are making.

  • News

    Jessica Crowe on love at a local level

    2006-11-20T10:41:56Z

    'Lay scrutiny can act as a stimulus for real change and innovation - especially where local authorities and health bodies work closely together on a long-term basis'

  • HSJ Knowledge

    Helen Bevan on the push for productivity

    2006-11-20T10:40:27Z

    'Over the past 10 years, we have learned a great deal about applying the principles of modern operations management to healthcare delivery'

  • HSJ Knowledge

    Tackling nuisance behaviour on NHS premises

    2006-11-20T00:00:00Z

    Disturbances in hospitals are sadly an all too common part of life in the NHS. Over 60,000 assaults against staff were reported to the NHS Security Management Service during 2004 and 2005, and the Healthcare Commission estimates that only around two-thirds of assaults are actually reported - the true number ...

  • News

    Public 'don't want NHS ads for services'

    2006-11-20T00:00:00Z

    Voters are overwhelmingly opposed to government plans to let hospitals advertise, according to a survey conducted by YouGov for the NHS Together alliance of health unions.The Department of Health is expected to publish a code of practice allowing hospitals to market their services under the era of choice.But the poll ...

  • News

    New role for former Audit Commission chair

    2006-11-20T00:00:00Z

    James Strachan, until recently chairman of the Audit Commission, has been appointed a non-executive director of Care UK PLC.One of the largest health and social care providers in the UK, Care UK operates 90 community-based care homes, runs a range of primary care services including GP out of hours services ...

  • News

    British Heart Foundation launches 999 campaign

    2006-11-20T00:00:00Z

    The public is being urged to call 999 immediately of they experience chest pain, warning that 'doubt kills'. A survey commissioned by the British Heart Foundation found that 40 per cent of people would not make 999 their first call if they thought they were having a heart attack.Read more ...

  • Comment

    Dianne Leyland on the lack of clarity over local involvement networks

    2006-11-19T00:00:00Z

    Voluntary and community groups must be actively involved if LINks are to work. Yet the sectors' goodwill, undermined by the botched creation of patient forums, is eroding further.

  • News

    Medics warned off community work by cash-strapped trust

    2006-11-16T10:00:00Z

    A financially troubled hospital trust is warning consultants not to carry out NHS work in the community unless there are guarantees that payments stay with the trust.

  • News

    Turnaround help for a third of acutes as deficits reach £1.2bn gross

    2006-11-16T10:00:00Z

    More than one-third of all acute trusts and a quarter of all primary care trusts are receiving turnaround support as it was revealed that deficits in the NHS are climbing again.

  • News

    Service-line economics goes to the heart of patient care

    2006-11-16T10:00:00Z

    As we reveal this week, foundation regulator Monitor will be consulting trusts on compliance guidance to push the adoption of service-line economics (feature, page 22).

  • News

    PCTs pull plug on £550m hospital for Hertfordshire

    2006-11-16T00:00:00Z

    Plans for new hospitals in Hertfordshire were in tatters this week after a £550m scheme to build a hospital and cancer centre in Hatfield were axed.

  • News

    New emergency planning guidance published

    2006-11-15T00:00:00Z

    The Department of Health is consulting on new guidance for dealing with major emergencies like terrorist attacks.The best practice guidance is meant to help health services in planning, preparing and responding to all types of emergencies including natural disasters, infectious epidemics and major power cuts.The consultation closes on 31 December.Read ...

  • News

    Scottish Executive unveils plans to reform nursing

    2006-11-15T00:00:00Z

    New measures to reform nursing in Scotland have been unveiled by the Scottish Executive.Health minister Andy Kerr launched the Delivering Care, Enabling Healthstrategy, which will give nurses, midwives and allied health professionals a bigger role in patient care.The strategy was published alongside a review ...

  • News

    NHS financial crisis squeezing medical education, BMA warns

    2006-11-14T00:00:00Z

    Patient care could be affected by cuts to medical training and education, according to the British Medical Association. Funding for study leave and academic posts in medical schools has been cut to help tackle deficits. The BMA junior doctors committee has written to health secretary ...

  • Comment

    Richard Barker on why the IT programme is never going to come right

    2006-11-13T10:53:19Z

    'NPfIT will never get back on track; it was never on track in the first place. It breaks every rule of project management - from scoping to delivery - and is patently failing to take into account the actual requirements of clinicians across the NHS.'