All Health Service Journal articles in September 2025 – Page 6
-
HSJ AwardsHSJ Patient Safety Awards 2025: Urgent and Emergency Care Safety Initiative of the Year
WINNER Nottingham University Hospitals Trust The Respiratory Rough Sleepers Virtual Ward
-
HSJ AwardsHSJ Patient Safety Awards 2025: Virtual or Remote Care Initiative of the Year
WINNER Norfolk and Norwich University FT Hyperemesis and Virtual Ward
-
HSJ AwardsHSJ Patient Safety Awards 2025: Advancing Patient Safety with Data and Analytics
WINNER Northumbria Healthcare Foundation Trust Health Inequalities in Endoscopy; DNA Predictor and Navigation Pilot
-
HSJ AwardsHSJ Patient Safety Awards 2025: Deteriorating Patients and Rapid Response Initiative of the Year
WINNER University Hospitals of Derby and Burton FT A Parkinson’s Rapid Advisory and Intervention Therapy Service
-
Daily InsightDaily Insight: Best chance or not enough?
The must-read stories and debate in health policy and leadership.
-
NewsHSJ Patient Safety Awards 2025: Winners revealed
The winners of the HSJ Patient Safety Awards 2025 were announced last night at Manchester Central Convention Complex, where more than 1,000 people gathered to celebrate excellence in patient safety across the NHS.
-
NewsSuicide leading cause of death among new mothers
The NHS needs to do more to prevent suicides among pregnant women and new mothers, a national audit has recommended.
-
NewsMerged agency must keep board, Streeting told
Three patient safety groups – one chaired by former health secretary Jeremy Hunt – are calling for the patient safety watchdog to retain its independence when it is absorbed into the Care Quality Commission.
-
NewsHospitals falling far short of national quality target
The NHS fell well short of its goal to offer the best standard of acute stroke treatment to 10 per cent of patients last year, with some units carrying out the procedure only once a week.
-
Expert BriefingThe Download: The last Next Big Thing
The weekly newsletter that unpacks system leaders’ priorities for digital technology and the impact they are having on delivering health services. This week by Ben Clover and Ella Devereux. Contact HSJ in confidence here.
-
NewsSeventh ICB chief steps down in string of departures
An integrated care board CEO has announced he will leave this autumn, becoming the seventh in a string of departures from ICBs which are not clustering or merging.
-
NewsNurse leader will ‘chain herself to railings’ over international recruitment
The boss of the Royal College of Nursing has threatened to “chain herself to the railings in Cavendish Square” if the NHS returns to a “feast or famine” approach to international recruitment.
-
CommentDiagnostics must not be an afterthought for NHS reform
Diagnostics is a strategic enabler of NHS reform, with in vitro diagnostics driving earlier, smarter, and more equitable care, but policy must catch up, says David Wells
-
Expert BriefingFollowing the Money: Joe Public doesn’t care about NHS deficits
HSJ’s expert briefing on NHS finances, savings and efforts to get back in the black. By finance correspondent Henry Anderson.
-
Daily InsightDaily Insight: Not the job they signed up for
The must-read stories and debate in health policy and leadership.
-
NewsTrust seeks £150m partner to boost private income
A trust in the South West is planning to boost its income by treating more private patients, according to a £150m tender notice.
-
HSJ LocalLeaders ‘quick to blame’ at ‘inadequate’ hospital department
Staff have accused leaders of being “quick to find someone to blame” in an inspection that has rated a hospital department “inadequate”.
-
HSJ PartnersDigital transformation in the NHS: Navigating strategic shifts through system-wide coordination
The NHS 10-Year Health Plan, released in July 2025, establishes three fundamental shifts: analogue to digital, treatment to prevention, and hospital to community care.
-
NewsCharity commits £10m to build ‘neighbourhood’ care with trusts
A charity will invest £10m in a new scheme that aims to shift care from hospitals into the community.
-
CommentPolitical calls to cut immigration are a red flag for the NHS
The NHS relies on global talent. Restricting migration risks staff shortages, longer waits, and poorer care for patients across the UK, writes Ben Simms











