Latest news – Page 2930

  • News

    CAN SCOTLAND GO ALL THE WAY?

    1998-01-29T00:00:00Z

    Who said Scotland couldn't win the World Cup under a Labour government? (Comment, 15 January).

  • News

    PUBLIC HEALTH GREEN PAPER SHOULD PUT ITS WEIGHT BEHIND A NEW TARGET

    1998-01-29T00:00:00Z

    Congratulations to the Journal for its early publication and analysis of Our Healthier Nation (News, News Focus, Comment, 22 January). Even in your concise summary, the central conceptual flaw in the public health strategy is obvious.

  • News

    ARACHNOPHOBIA THE MOVIE? NO, ARACHNOPHOBIA THE JOURNAL

    1998-01-29T00:00:00Z

    I find the Journal interesting and informative - all but one page, which I cannot read.

  • News

    A SIMPLE SOLUTION FOR THE STUDENT SHORTAGE

    1998-01-29T00:00:00Z

    The Medical Workforce Standing Advisory Committee says the annual intake of medical students should be increased by about 1,000 as soon as possible (News Focus, page 13, 8 January).

  • News

    LONDON'S 24-HOUR HELPLINE IS OLD NEWS IN OLDHAM

    1998-01-29T00:00:00Z

    You stated that a London health authority is using pounds195,000 of winter pressures money to launch what might be the first 24-hour nurse- led helpline to direct patients from casualty wards (News, page 6, 15 January).

  • News

    A BEACON FOR THE REST OF THE HEALTH SERVICE?

    1998-01-29T00:00:00Z

    You are right that not everyone was idle over the holiday period in Hampshire (News, page 5; Comment, 8 January) as not only was normal business being carried out by social services and the local NHS trust, but also programmed meetings were being held between those organisations and Test Valley ...

  • News

    PRO-SMOKING LOBBY IS ONLY SCORING OWN GOALS

    1998-01-29T00:00:00Z

    Martin Ball, spokesman for a tobacco industry-funded pressure group (Letters, 15 January), claims that under-age smoking would increase if the legal age for selling cigarettes was raised from 16 to 18. If this is true - which is most unlikely - why does he object, given that the tobacco industry ...

  • News

    THE DIFFERENCE BETWEEN PHARMACISTS AND VETS

    1998-01-29T00:00:00Z

    Unison's Karen Jennings (News Focus, page 13, 15 January) should read the Medicines Act again and more carefully. Not only can pharmacists prescribe according to their own judgement, but what they prescribe does not even have to be licensed by the Medicines Control Agency.

  • News

    GETTING THE FIGURES STRAIGHTENED OUT

    1998-01-29T00:00:00Z

    An error crept into my article 'Home truths' (pages 30-31, 15 January). It should read:

  • News

    BY ALAN MAYNARD Happy days are here again

    1998-01-29T00:00:00Z

    'Many GPs seem to see the white paper as a triumph of primary care over the rest of the NHS and the creation of a new nirvana for them. Sorry comrades - this is the beginning of the management of primary care within a cash-limited budget'

  • News

    Brown bides his time as Hancock stakes her claim BY MICHAEL WHITE

    1998-01-29T00:00:00Z

    Right. Before we start on real life, what do Bill Clinton's Zippergate problems have to do with America's recurring healthcare crisis? A great deal, according to Gore Vidal, novelist, East Coast grandee and critic of what he tends to see as the new Roman Empire.

  • News

    Monitor

    1998-01-29T00:00:00Z

    It is no wonder Labour got into power when you consider how many secret admirers they had before the election who are now able to voice their true feelings. Consider Michael Goldsmith. He might have been an adviser to Stephen Dorrell. He might have had a hand in the Tories' ...

  • News

    All our Yesterdays

    1998-01-29T00:00:00Z

    30 January 1948

  • News

    WEB WATCH

    1998-01-29T00:00:00Z

    With the Devolution Bill now through its second reading and a site chosen for the Scottish Parliament, progress towards self rule is advancing apace. And nowhere more so than in the health service, for which the Designed to Care white paper maps out a future very different from that south ...

  • News

    America on the line

    1998-01-29T00:00:00Z

    Telephone advice lines run by nurses have long existed in the US, but the growing use of them is proving unpopular with patients.

  • News

    Key Points

    1998-01-29T00:00:00Z

    The growth of telephone advice lines has been partly driven by managed care schemes, keen to reduce use of health services.

  • News

    Clinicians will get a major role in Scot tish reforms

    1998-01-29T00:00:00Z

    Clinicians are to be given a major role in reshaping health services in the first detailed plan implementing the government's white paper reforms in Scotland.

  • News

    Fund GPs pull out in protest at Labour plan

    1998-01-29T00:00:00Z

    A Berkshire practice is thought to be the first to pull out of the fundholding scheme in protest at the Labour government's health reforms.

  • News

    on the record

    1998-01-29T00:00:00Z

    DONALD REID is the chief executive of the Association for Public Health. He was previously executive director of the Health Education Authority, specialising in programmes for youth and smoking prevention. He is an international consultant on tobacco control strategies.

  • News

    In person

    1998-01-29T00:00:00Z

    London Ambulance Service trust has appointed its first medical director. Fionna Moore (above), an accident and emergency consultant at Charing Cross and Hammersmith hospitals, will be working for LAS two days a week and providing clinical guidance on patient care. LAS has also promoted Wendy Foers to the post of ...