Latest news – Page 2649
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Just good friends
It takes a certain sort of person to become an NHS board member: someone who cares passionately about the health service, someone who knows their local community and, ideally , someone who has some experience of picking their way through a political minefield.
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Dissenting voices
Over the millennium celebration period the NHS Direct service in west London had a team of up to 30 nurses answering more than 1,800 calls a day.
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HAI big spender
When Gordon Vassell was admitted to a north London hospital for a double hernia operation, he expected to be home again within a few days. He ended up in isolation for two weeks.
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Aspirational cash has never been more needed
And still the onslaught persists. The health services first month in the new century has been as turbulent as any in its history. The past week alone has seen the national press's anti-NHS lobby mount the second wave of its attack, deploying such trusty old war-horses as the continuing existence ...
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Act now on infertility services
Managers need no reminder of the fragile nature of politicians promises, but this week has produced a timely one, nonetheless. Remember the pledge to end the postcode lottery of infertility service provision? The author of government guidelines - published only last week, and aimed at helping to do just that ...
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Getting the hump with HImPs
Most HAs are failing to prioritise the needs of children and young people in health improvement programmes, despite some good initiatives. Angela Underdown and Carol Sexty report on a nationwide survey
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Add nauseam
Today , I received a letter home from school. This is not unusual. Letters about headlice, and the home-school agreement are regularly buried at the bottom of my childs bag. But this one was different. It made me angry because of its potential impact on childrens health.
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Watching the detectives
When clinical audit was first introduced, it ruffled a few feathers among clinicians. But auditing the audit process itself can highlight the real benefits to clinical practice and quality of care, as well as identifying any weaknesses - and show that many clinicians are quite satisfied with audit staff and ...
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What the country expects now
Health Care UK has become established reading for health policy buffs. It starts with three short editorials. Among these, one by Rudolf Klein, asking whether the NHS has a future, ranges over a broad canvas. On one level it covers familiar ground, raising the spectre of a growth in expectations ...
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As if people mattered
A useful, wide-ranging, reference book, the emphasis here is on involvement in planning and improving standards of services. It will be especially useful in primary care.