Latest news – Page 2920
-
News
Mergers must have meaning
We need to cure 'merger mania' - or more accurately, to take the mania out of mergers. In April, the first wave of trust mergers will kick- start radical change to the shape of acute services. Mergers have always been a political hot potato, causing local headaches for the government, ...
-
News
Management today is full of dsfdfs BY MICHAEL WHITE
John Maples is not a happy man. Though he gets tipped (sometimes) as one of the successes of William Hague's soon-to-be-reshuffled team, he is still smarting over Frank Dobson's reshuffle of 886 seats on NHS trust boards. Details were craftily issued just as Commons health question time ended.
-
News
Key implications
Cholesterol screening programmes are unlikely to reduce mortality and can be misleading or harmful.
-
News
on the record
SIMON STEVENS, 31, is health secretary Frank Dobson's special adviser for policy. He has previously worked as a health authority director, at London teaching hospitals, in mental health in the North East, and in Guyana and New York. He went to Oxford and Strathclyde universities.
-
News
In person
John James has been appointed director of community and specialist health services at Hounslow and Spelthorne Community and Mental Health trust. He joins from King's Healthcare trust, where he was clinical services manager for two-and-a-half years. Previously he was chief executive of the former Kensington & Chelsea and Westminster family ...
-
News
LibDems call in safe-sex guide academic to rewrite manifesto
A former chief executive of the Health Education Authority, who quit after falling out with Conservative government ministers over a 'smutty' safe sex guide for children, is to help the Liberal Democrats overhaul their health policy.
-
News
Earthbound and liable to erupt
Health secretary Frank Dobson and the cerebral MP for York Hugh Bayley are old friends; together with public health minister Tessa Jowell, they form a trio of ex-Camden councillors who have become key players in New Labour's health agenda.
-
News
Clark sets up public services panel
Focus groups are the flavour of the month in government circles. The latest - dubbed, inevitably, 'the People's Panel' - has been set up by public services minister David Clark.
-
News
Hansard
The government is 'deeply concerned about the possibility of unfairness in the distinction awards scheme' for consultants, and is 'considering what further action might be taken', said health minister Alan Milburn in response to High Peak Labour MP Tom Levitt, who asked if merit awards would be investigated.
-
News
Key Points
Employing an extra social worker at a 600-bed acute hospital over three winter months (January to March 1997) and extending the opening hours of the medical assessment unit reduced delayed discharges.
-
News
Total commitment
GPs and senior managers in a deprived locality tested GP commissioning with successful outcomes. Roger Levesley describes the project
-
News
A special dispensation
A scheme allowing hospital patients to administer their own drugs has been well received and has brought substantial savings.
-
News
Key points
A pilot scheme allowing hospital inpatients to take responsibility for administering their own drugs has been well received by patients and nurses.
-
News
Five key questions are asked during the assessment
Does the patient want to take part in the self-medication scheme?
-
News
References
1 Wood S et al. A self-medication scheme for elderly patients improves compliance with their medication regimes. International J of Pharmacy Practice 1992; 1: 240-1.
-
News
When the going gets tough
One in four nurses will be eligible for retirement in the next two years and places out number applicants for nurse training.
-
News
Takers and leavers - recruitment facts
The Royal College of Nursing puts current nurse turnover at 21 per cent (compared with 14 per cent in 1987 and 12 per cent in 1992).