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NHS surplus could make a real difference to GP access – NHS Alliance

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NHS surplus could make a real difference to GP access – NHS Alliance

 

UK - Now that the overwhelming majority of family doctors have voted to provide extra out of hours surgery time, practices and primary care trusts will be able to settle down to sorting out what will best serve patients in their areas.
One practical option is to use the predicted NHS surplus – estimated to be around £1.8 billion – to make sure that extended hours offers real benefits to patients and does not become a tokenistic exercise.
Even though many GPs will be offering evening or Saturday morning surgeries, facilities they and their patients depend on may not be available. For instance, collection and analysis of blood tests, many diagnostic services and even the government’s flagship Choose and Book are often accessible only during normal office hours.
It will not help patients who see their doctor on a Saturday, if they then have to return on Monday because the laboratory that would check their blood test is closed for the weekend. And it will be infuriating for people having an evening appointment to have to come back the following day because Choose and Book closes down at 6.00 pm in their area.
The NHS Alliance is calling on health service to use this year’s surplus to support extended access by making these essential facilities available during GP surgery hours.
At the same time, general practice is now a team affair. It is not just the GP who matters, but practice and specialist nurses, increasingly practice physiotherapists, counsellors and other clinicians. The new extended hours agreement applies only to doctors. Part of the surplus could be used to support extended hours for the full primary care team, benefiting all those patients who need the services of clinicians other than doctors.

NHS Alliance chairman Dr Michael Dixon said:
“We have an extraordinary opportunity to provide improvements patients want and need. A significant part of the NHS surplus should be released to support extended access.
“At the same time, the health service must now make sure that primary care trusts and GP practices are allowed to make their own decisions, in the light of local circumstances and local need, as to how the new arrangements are implemented. There is no ‘one size fits all’ solution to access and we should not pretend there is.”

 

Injection discovery may halt osteoporosis – Daily Telegraph

 

An injection that prevents the onset of brittle bone disease could offer hope to millions, scientists say.
Injections of a thyroid stimulating hormone (TSH) stopped the development of osteoporosis and improved bone strength, tests showed.

 

NICE issues guidance for engaging communities in promoting health – UK Pharma Times


The National Institute for Health and Clinical Excellence has published public health guidance designed to help communities get more involved in the planning, design and delivery of services aimed at boosting the health and well-being of the country.

Nationwide strategies to help promote good health and tackle health inequalities are heavily focused on the involvement of communities, in particular disadvantages ones, by encouraging them to take part in activities such as short-term consultations or the planning, development and management of local health services.

Although the idea of engaging communities has been kicking around for several decades, there have been many obstacles to its effective implementation, such as “dominance of professional cultures and ideologies in imposing their own structures and solutions on communities, the skills and competencies of staff working in public services and the capacity and willingness of service users and the public to get involved (Pickin et al. 2002),” according to NICE.

“There is already plenty of guidance on how to engage communities, but this represents the first concerted attempt to draw together evidence on what is most likely to affect the underlying determinants of health,” commented Anna Coote, Head of Patient and Public Involvement at the Healthcare Commission and Chair of the Programme Development Group. “The guidance makes it clear that much depends on statutory organisations being prepared to change the way they think and act, in order to redress imbalances of power between those who provide services, and those for whom the services are intended,” she added.

Four key themes
The new guidance is directed at those working in the National Health Service and other sectors with a role in community engagement, and is centred on four “interlocking themes” key to the effective implementation of related initiatives: prerequisites for success; an optimal infrastructure; approaches; and evaluation.

Prerequisites for success include an emphasis on joint working to put in place relevant policy initiatives, openness to organisational and cultural change and a willingness to share power. Once these have been met, the Institute claims it will be much easier to put in place an appropriate infrastructure to achieve the central aims of local engagement, for which it will be crucial to provide appropriate training and development of those working with the community.

Recommendations for approaches to boost levels of community engagement outline how they can be used to encourage local communities to become involved in health promotion activities and local initiatives to address social factors in health. And finally, the guidance makes recommendations about the best ways to assess programmes to boost understanding of how community engagement might impact on health and social outcomes.

Liam Hughes, National Adviser, Healthy Communities, at the Improvement and Development Agency for local government, said the guidance “chimes well with the government’s drive for social inclusion, and the role of local government in promoting healthier places for the local population”.

He went on to say: “In areas of profound and multiple deprivation, progress depends on the active participation of local people, and the internal generation of the motivation to change’, and stressed: “It is likely that strong, engaged and empowered communities will be healthier communities".

 

Daily pill could curb death toll from blood clots after surgery – The Times

 

A daily pill that could help to prevent tens of thousands of deaths due to blood clots will be available to hospitals within weeks.

The condition, venous thrombo-embolism (VTE), causes one in ten fatalities in hospital and kills at least 25,000 people in England every year, more than 20 times the number of deaths attributed to the superbug MRSA.