All Health Service Journal articles in Opinion – Page 29

  • Comment

    Emma Dent

    2007-05-17T09:46:42Z

    'I have never had such a strong reaction as I did when I told people I was visiting the high-secure former special hospital Broadmoor.'

  • Comment

    Dr Nick Griffin on clinical input in the development of HRG4

    2007-05-21T00:00:00Z

    In 2002, the Department of Health developed a policy to fund healthcare by a national tariff applied to patient level activity. This policy, payment by results, required a new currency for the grouping of activity.

  • Comment

    Andrew Jones on independence day

    2007-05-21T00:00:00Z

    'The conundrum is simply how to devolve day-to-day responsibility to an independent board with the benefits of efficient delivery, local decisions and avoidance of political interference'

  • News

    Dr David Jenner on the workability of PBC

    2007-05-21T00:00:00Z

    Are primary care trusts and strategic health authorities really encouraging GPs to get to grips with practice-based commissioning? Or are some of them encouraging this policy to fade away?

  • Comment

    Delayed discharge brought back in focus

    2007-05-24T00:00:00Z

    Bed blocking is back and, at least in mental health, it is joint working with social care teams where the most effort needs to be applied.

  • Gordon Brown
    Comment

    Brown finally begins to reveal his blueprint for health reform

    2007-05-24T00:00:00Z

    As the surreal spectacle of Gordon Brown campaigning for victory in a contest he has already won continues, his interviews and speeches are finally shedding light on his health policies.

  • Comment

    Your Humble Servant: dead man walking

    2007-05-24T00:00:00Z

    ‘It’s difficult to know who to ingratiate yourself with, which policies might survive and which we should backpedal on.’

  • Comment

    Micheal White on Maggie's handbag and other stories

    2007-05-24T00:00:00Z

    Thirty years after filing his first column, HSJ political commentator Michael White looks back at how the landscape has changed

  • Comment

    Deborah O'Dea on coping with change

    2007-05-28T00:00:00Z

    'Change is no less difficult when our intentions are absolutely right and serving patients' best interests.'.

  • Comment

    Mike Cooke on succession planning

    2007-05-28T00:00:00Z

    'I came back with gusto, lungs full, laptop (and pencil) poised and with best away-visit intentions started with my job. I am delighted to say we did fill my job with a great internal candidate'

  • News

    Deficit crisis: ground won for training must be held in face of cash battles

    2007-05-31T00:00:00Z

    'The government's service-level agreement - a response to criticism of the 10 per cent cut in training by SHAs last year - looks to be a dead letter within days of being published'

  • News

    Partnership working needs financial conviction

    2007-05-31T00:00:00Z

    'Anxious to move on from rows over cost-shunting, the Association of Directors of Adult Social Services has pledged to champion partnership working, pooled budgets and joint commissioning'

  • Comment

    Emma Dent

    2007-05-31T00:00:00Z

    'Malawi has.only 700 healthcare workers for the whole country. One nurse can be in charge of 100 patients in rural clinics. It has the third worst maternal mortality rate in the world. Not even disposable gloves are available.'

  • News

    Emma Dent's Malawi diary - day 1

    2007-06-04T00:00:00Z

    International overnight flights should have been banned under the Geneva Convention. The 15-hour journey from Heathrow to Kamuzu airport, with a dash across Johannesburg airport to catch a connecting flight, was my first flight either outside Europe or lasting more than four hours. Although the tiny time difference means that ...

  • News

    Emma Dent's Malawi diary - day 2

    2007-06-04T00:00:00Z

    An early start today. Contrary to my preconceptions about laid back African living, Malawi seems to be an early to bed early to rise kind of place; perhaps not surprisingly when it goes dark (and by dark I mean pitch black as there are no street lights; even city dwellers ...

  • News

    Emma Dent's Malawi diary - day 3

    2007-06-04T00:00:00Z

    At breakfast in the hotel we are joined by Alex, a freelance journalist who used to work as a media officer for Oxfam after being a journalist and returned to the third estate a few years ago. (He was once a war correspondent after starting out as an arts writer ...

  • News

    Emma Dent's Malawi diary - day 4

    2007-06-04T00:00:00Z

    I am woken at dawn by the muezzin from the Lilongwe mosque and prevented from getting back to sleep by the cleaners, whose stockroom is on the same floor, not long after starting work with a great deal of bucket clattering..

  • News

    Emma Dent's Malawi diary - day 5

    2007-06-04T00:00:00Z

    This morning we head in different directions; we say goodbye to Claire as she heads home and Alex and Abbey go back to Bwaila to sweet talk its management into letting them take photos there, Karen and I to meet the Water Employees Trade Union.

  • News

    Emma Dent's Malawi diary - day 6

    2007-06-04T00:00:00Z

    Before the flight Karen and I have time to go for a walk into Lilongwe, round the central market (just as busy, noisy and chaotic as London's Petticoat Lane market and selling the same hotch potch of goods) and do some shopping. I buy wooden bowls, pottery made in Dedza, ...

  • News

    David Lock on continuing care liability

    2007-06-04T00:00:00Z

    'The dividing line between healthcare and social care has been the subject of numerous legal cases, endless guidance, appeals to and reports by the parliamentary ombudsman and more than a few scratched managers' heads over the years'