News – Page 2434
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HSJ writer cleans up award for dirty hospitals story
Published: 06/12/2001, Volume III, No. 5784 Page 8
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£7m overspend blamed on 'bad management' as 135 jobs go
Published: 06/12/2001, Volume III, No. 5784 Page 8 9
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Unchecked paediatrician 'errors' trigger trust systems inquiry
Published: 06/12/2001, Volume III, No. 5784 Page 9
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In place of strife
news focus: Sectarian violence in Northern Ireland has left health services with further strain on increasingly tight budgets. Jonathan Traynor reports on the legacy of confrontation
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Long-haul plight
news focus: Unacceptable waiting times, too few beds and a looming general election - the Irish Republic's solution is a 10-year plan for its health service. Joe Armstrong reports
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On shaky ground
The Wanless report said far more about the future of the NHS than merely its funding. Paul Stephenson asks whether its predictions are founded on crumbling assumptions
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Let's twist again
news focus: The independent-minded Scottish health minister will be thrust into the firing line as he implements a tough agenda. But Malcolm Chisholm's appointment is a popular, if surprising, move, says Jennifer Trueland
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Senior academics on move as universities face uncertainty
Published: 06/12/2001, Volume III, No. 5784 Page 10
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Days like this
Better nurse management needed - DoH writes off capital charge discrepancies -no payout for non-haemophiliacs -AMA funding fury - Row over PM's role in Papworth decision
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Private contractors urge managers to join them to learn more about PFI
Public service managers involved in private finance initiative schemes should be seconded to the private sector to learn more about the workings of commercial organisations, according to a National Audit Office survey.
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No-star trust chair quits as workload pressures mount
The chair of a no-star trust has resigned half way through the three-month probation period it had been given to sort its problems out, with workload pressures likely to have influenced her decision to go.
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Brown's £1bn 'will not yield quick returns'
The NHS budget is set to rise significantly over the next few years after the Treasury review of longterm trends in healthcare, chaired by former National Westminster Bank group chief executive Derek Wanless, showed that major increases in funding were needed to keep pace with an ageing population and advances ...











