All News articles – Page 2093

  • News

    Round the baccy

    1999-10-21T00:00:00Z

    A new centre will monitor the ways tobacco companies try to get round the ban on cigarette advertising. Barbara Millar reports

  • News

    Call for annual reports on Saving Lives white paper

    1999-10-21T00:00:00Z

    The UK Public Health Association has called for annual public health reports on the strategy in the Saving Lives white paper.

  • News

    Short cuts: Cocaine death trend among employed cohabitants

    1999-10-21T00:00:00Z

    A trend in cocaine-related deaths has been identified by the third report from the national programme on substance abuse deaths, run by St George's Hospital Medical School. Although only 18 deaths out of 695 reported by 96 coroners' jurisdictions in England and Wales involved cocaine, 'these cases differ from the ...

  • News

    You ain't seen nothing yet

    1999-10-21T00:00:00Z

    Normal new year A&E preparations are small beer compared with this year's activity. But will it be enough? Laura Donnelly reports

  • News

    Short cuts: Sickness absence problems at 60 per cent of trusts

    1999-10-21T00:00:00Z

    Sixty per cent of trusts see the level of sickness absence among staff as a problem and 86 per cent are running, or plan to run, some sort of initiative to reduce it, according to a survey of all 402 trusts in England by the Government Statistical Service. The average ...

  • News

    NI fundholding to continue until 2001

    1999-10-21T00:00:00Z

    GP fundholding is to be extended in Northern Ireland 'at least until April 2001' because of the political vacuum caused by the failure to set up a devolved assembly.

  • News

    Short cuts: Hutt announces £1m anti-smoking drive for Wales

    1999-10-21T00:00:00Z

    Welsh health and social services minister Jane Hutt has announced a £1m programme to implement the policies set out in the Smoking Kills white paper. A 'smokebusters' club for 9 to 11-year-olds will be set up as part of initiatives to curb smoking among children and young people. New smoking ...

  • News

    WEB WATCH

    1999-10-14T00:00:00Z

    A tax on the poor, a tax on stupidity - the National Lottery has been called many things, lots of them uncomplimentary, and particularly so a few minutes after 8pm each Saturday. But with the New Opportunities Fund handing out used fivers by the wheelbarrow-load, could some in the NHS ...

  • News

    Shift up

    1999-10-14T00:00:00Z

    A tribunal's finding that nurses were discriminated against suggests trusts should beware when switching to rotating nursing shifts. Rosemary Lloyd and Julie Goulding explain

  • News

    Protest and survive

    1999-10-14T00:00:00Z

    Patients, power and politics From patients to citizens By Christine Hogg Sage Publications 213 pages £49

  • News

    Private thoughts, public service

    1999-10-14T00:00:00Z

    Towards the end of the last Conservative government it was a brave NHS manager who openly advocated doing business with the private sector.

  • News

    Smoking prevention

    1999-10-14T00:00:00Z

    There is no simple answer to stopping young people smoking, but a co-ordinated approach between agencies is the best strategy, argue Rachel Richardson and Amanda Sowden

  • News

    in person

    1999-10-14T00:00:00Z

    Catherine McLoughlin, chair of the NHS Confederation, becomes chair of St George's Healthcare trust on 1 November. Since 1994, she has been chair of Bromley health authority. She takes over from Dr Elizabeth Vallance, who has chaired the trust since its inception six years ago.

  • News

    Slow start for PCT take-up

    1999-10-14T00:00:00Z

    The first wave of primary care trusts, due to go live next April, may amount to just one 'demonstration site' in each of the eight English regions, according to HSJ sources.

  • News

    Sins of omission

    1999-10-14T00:00:00Z

    Taking action to support carers By Penny Banks and Colin Cheeseman King's Fund 80 pages £9.95

  • News

    Offensive weapons

    1999-10-14T00:00:00Z

    The killing machines of modern warfare pose a host of ethical and political questions as well as medical ones, as Tash Shifrin observed at a BMA conference

  • News

    monitor

    1999-10-14T00:00:00Z

    It takes a brave man to twist Dobbo's arm - especially with Joe 'the enforcer' McCrea snapping at your ankles. So did he want to be mayor of London all along? Monitor thinks not, and cites in evidence an exchange between His Dobship and Jonathan Dimbleby on the latter's LWT ...