All Health Service Journal articles in July 2025 – Page 8
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Daily InsightDaily Insight: When the Leeds Way fails
The must-read stories and debate in health policy and leadership.
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NewsChildren’s heart unit in ‘very precarious state’
A surgeon at one of England’s largest teaching trusts has had their practice restricted following the deaths of two children, amid a “worrying and significant deterioration” in mortality rates for its children’s heart service.
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NewsTrusts appoint joint CEO
An acute trust and a community provider serving the same area have appointed a shared chief executive.
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CommentRegulation of managers must be equitable as well as effective
New NHS manager regulation must go beyond disbarring – supporting standards, equity, and leadership development to truly improve healthcare leadership, writes Saffron Cordery
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HSJ PartnersBridging the gap in hereditary angioedema care
As clinicians and patient representatives, we see firsthand the challenges faced by people living with hereditary angioedema, write Patrick Yong, Tomaz Garcez, Anthony Dorr, Emily Carne, and Angela Metcalfe
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NewsCoroners reveal concerns over trust safety investigations
Trusts are beginning to run parallel safety investigations because a compulsory new national process does not meet the demands of coroners, HSJ has learned.
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NewsBMA ‘demanding extortionate pay’ during strikes
The British Medical Association expects trusts to pay “extortionate” rates for resident doctors asked to run services during the current strike, according to NHS England.
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Expert BriefingThe Download: Upgrade delayed?
The weekly newsletter that unpacks system leaders’ priorities for digital technology and the impact they are having on delivering health services. This week written by Ben Clover. Contact HSJ in confidence here.
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NewsNew CEO for trust with high staff satisfaction
An acute trust in the East Midlands has appointed a new chief executive following a “highly competitive” recruitment campaign.
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Daily InsightDaily Insight: A post-mortem on the status quo
The must-read stories and debate in health policy and leadership.
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NewsGPs urged to join forces to avoid ‘imposition’ of neighbourhood providers
GPs should rapidly start “collaborative discussions” with peers about developing joint “models” to fit in with the government’s proposed development of “neighbourhood health”, the British Medical Association’s GP committee has said.
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CommentElective recovery is leaving minority ethnic patients behind
New analysis reveals stark inequalities in elective care waits, highlighting deprivation, ethnicity, and digital exclusion as key barriers to equitable recovery
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HSJ PartnersUnlocking the power of end-to-end digital solutions in healthcare: Global insights for the NHS
As the NHS faces ever-increasing demand, persistent staffing shortages, and an expanding backlog of care, all eyes are on digital solutions.
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NewsHospital denied large ‘refund’ because staff missed training
A trust was denied a payment worth hundreds of thousands of pounds because staff missed training sessions during high operational pressures, it says.
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NewsExclusive: Regulator CEO resigns
The chief executive of the National Institute for Health and Care Excellence, Sam Roberts, is to stand down at Christmas.
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News£4bn hospital group to appoint shared CEO
The biggest hospital group in England is set to announce a joint chief executive, HSJ can reveal.
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Daily InsightDaily Insight: Unite now or regret later
The must-read stories and debate in health policy and leadership.
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NewsExclusive: Review uncovers misogyny and paternalistic culture at major trust
An independent review of a major trust has uncovered claims of misogyny and a failure to deal with “unwanted romantic advances”, HSJ can reveal.
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HSJ PartnersTruly fit for the future? My view on the 10-Year Health Plan for England
Tactical use of technology could make – or break – the delivery of the 10-Year Health Plan and ensure the NHS is sustainable in the long-term, writes DXC’s Jo Jackson
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NewsTrust ‘missed opportunities’ in child’s death
The health service should carry out a national review of the use of paper-based records in children’s care, an independent investigation into a child’s death has said.











