Jump to content
  • articles
    9,839
  • comments
    83
  • views
    12,456,868

Contributors to this article

About this News

Articles in the news

Home-birth system is a ‘risk to patient safety’, audit finds

The current home-birth system in Ireland creates a “risk to patient safety”, an internal health audit has found.

The Health Service Executive (HSE) audit reached this finding as there is no agreed maximum safe travel time to the nearest maternity unit or self-employed community midwife (SECM).

In February 2022, the home-birth service was moved from community operations to acute operations and is now integrated into the 19 maternity services nationwide.

In light of this, the HSE conducted an audit to establish the “adequacy and effectiveness of governance and risk management” of the home-birth service.

The auditors examined three sites – Cork University Maternity Hospital, Rotunda Maternity Hospital and the Coombe Maternity Hospital – and reviewed 30 midwifery notes relating to home births that occurred from March 1st, 2023, until February 29th, 2024.

It found weaknesses in the system of governance across all three sites that the audit said created a “significant risk that the system will fail to meet its objectives”.

According to the audit report, there is “no national governance structure in place” for home births as acute operations no longer has oversight due to the reorganisation of the HSE into the six health regions.

Read full story

Source: Irish Times, 23 September 2025

Read more

Patients complain about disruption following new EPR in Sheffield

Patients have complained about disruption to outpatients bookings and waiting lists following the introduction of  a new electronic patient record (EPR) system at Sheffield Teaching Hospitals NHS Foundation Trust.

The trust went live with its £85 million Oracle Cerner EPR in July 2025, following an eight month delay to deal with “outstanding issues” around system and organisational readiness.

Following the go live, Clive Betts, MP for Sheffield South East, wrote to Kirsten Major, chief executive of the trust, stating that constituents had “serious concerns about an ongoing failure in the hospital’s digital patient records system that has persisted for a number of weeks”.

“According to these reports – which specifically mention cardiology and potentially other departments – the trust’s electronic system has been ‘down’ or malfunctioning in a way that waiting list data and patient records have gone missing or become inaccessible.

“In one case a patient was informed by staff that the cardiology department no longer knows who is on their waiting list due to this system issue.

“Understandably, this situation is causing anxiety to patients who are unsure if they remain in the queue for treatment or have ‘fallen off’ the list through no fault of their own,” the letter says.

Responding to the concerns, Major told Digital Health News: “A change of this magnitude and scale is bound to have some initial issues to resolve and we have had disruption to some of our outpatient appointment booking processes and correspondence.

“We picked this up very quickly and thanks to the amazing work of our staff many of the clinics affected have already been corrected, and we have a programme of work to complete the remainder as quickly as possible to limit any impact on existing waiting times.

“Our clinical teams are continuing to triage and prioritise the most urgent appointments as normal, and all patients will be contacted as soon as their appointment is ready to be scheduled in line with the waiting time for that clinic or service.”

Read full story

Source: Digital Health News, 24 September 2025

Related reading on the hub:

Read more

MHRA confirms taking paracetamol during pregnancy remains safe and there is no evidence it causes autism in children

Following the announcement by US President Donald Trump that US physicians will soon be advised not to prescribe paracetamol (known as Tylenol in the US) to pregnant women, Dr Alison Cave, Chief Safety Officer at the Medicines and Healthcare products Regulatory Agency (MHRA), said:

"Patient safety is our top priority. There is no evidence that taking paracetamol during pregnancy causes autism in children.   

"Paracetamol remains the recommended pain relief option for pregnant women when used as directed. Pregnant women should continue to follow existing NHS guidance and speak to their healthcare professional if they have questions about any medication during pregnancy. Untreated pain and fever can pose risks to the unborn baby, so it is important to manage these symptoms with the recommended treatment. 

"Our advice on medicines in pregnancy is based on rigorous assessment of the best available scientific evidence.  Any new evidence that could affect our recommendations would be carefully evaluated by our independent scientific experts. 

"We continuously monitor the safety of all medicines, including those used during pregnancy, through robust monitoring and surveillance. We encourage anyone to report any suspected side effects to us via the Yellow Card scheme."

Read full press release

Source: MHRA, 23 September 2025

MHRA factsheet on taking paracetamol while pregnant:

Factsheet - Paracetamol and Pregnancy.docx

Read more

Change prostate cancer treatment for black men to avoid ‘epidemic’, NHS urged

The NHS must change how black men are treated for prostate cancer to prevent “an epidemic of unnecessary deaths” in which twice as many die as white men, campaigners have warned.

Academics are seeking to raise awareness that one in four black men are getting this cancer, twice the rate of white men, which is one in eight, according to Prostate Cancer UK’s analysis of patient datasets for England. One in 12 black men are at risk of dying of this condition compared with one in 24 white men.

“We are living through an epidemic of unnecessary deaths of black men,” said Stafford Scott a community activist. “Prostate cancer is not colour blind. Not only is the death rate twice as high in black men as white men but we are being diagnosed late and so are coming into the system late.”

Scott, the director of the organisation Tottenham Rights, is teaming up with experts to launch a podcast series calling for fundamental changes in the NHS approach to prostate cancer and its high incidence among black men to prevent many more deaths.

This would reflect Prostate Cancer UK’s call to change “outdated NHS guidelines” so that GPs can be advised to start conversations with black men earlier and discuss with them taking prostate-specific antigen (PSA) blood tests to indicate cancer.

Approximately 55,300 new prostate cancer cases are diagnosed across the UK every year and this figure is projected to rise by 15% in the next 15 years.

Scott suggested that prostate cancer diagnosis and treatment could also be improved through broader NHS reforms, such as improving how it recruits and promotes black staff, including into leadership positions; partnering with black-led organisations to rebuild trust; improving transparency of health data; and increasing independent oversight of the NHS treatment black men receive.

“For too long, black men have been failed by the very system that is meant to keep us well. The result is a cycle of mistrust, late intervention, and preventable deaths,” he said.

Read full story

Source: The Guardian, 24 September 2025

Read more

‘Moral distress’ at trust’s ‘persistently underfunded’ neonates service

“Persistent underfunding” and staff shortages at a teaching trust’s neonatal service is likely to have harmed long-term development of newborn babies, an NHS England review has found.

A peer review of the service at Leeds Teaching Hospitals Trust, commissioned by NHSE, also found “burnout and moral distress” among its staff, linked to a lack of psychological support for them.

The review was one of two commissioned by LTHT to look at its neonatal and maternity care, following concerns. HSJ reported in February that MBRRACE-UK, the national mother and baby mortality audit, showed the trust had the highest extended perinatal mortality in the country in 2023, 2022 and 2021.

A summary of the neonatal review, published in LTHT’s September board papers, said: “This shortfall [in allied health professional staff] not only affects compliance with [National Institute for Health and Care Excellence] guidance for the neonatal follow-up programme but also results in non-compliance with the service specification for inpatient neonatal care.

“As a result, there is likely to be a negative impact on long-term neurodevelopmental outcomes for patients and reduced support for families.”

Read full story (paywalled)

Source: HSJ, 23 September 2025

Read more

Healthcare providers failed to inform most victims of medical error in Oregon, report says

Close to one-third of Oregonians have experience with medical errors like incorrectly prescribed medication or botched surgeries, but providers often failed to adequately inform them of their errors, according to a new report.  

The Oregon Patient Safety Commission released the findings this week in a 16-page state report on medical harm in the past five years, calling it “the first comprehensive review of post-pandemic patient safety data in Oregon.”

The Oregon Legislature created the agency in 2003 with the goal of providing an advocate for patient safety while incorporating the perspectives of medical providers, insurers and consumers.

The survey found that 30% of Oregonians have reported experiencing some form of medical harm in the past few years, whether that involved their own care or “someone close to them.” Medical harm is a broad category that can encompass a wide variety of improper practices or mistakes by doctors and medical providers, which may spiral into further inaccurate treatment plans.

The findings say that victims want to be informed about errors and receive an apology promptly, but that only about one in three receive such redress. When an error results in what the commission calls “serious health consequences,” researchers found Oregonians were less likely to get an apology.

 “The combination of transparency and apology after medical harm is what patients want and expect,” said TJ Sheehy, director of programs for the Oregon Patient Safety Commission, in a statement. “And while this can be challenging in practice, other studies show that providers do want to disclose when harm has occurred.”

Read full story

Source: Oregon Capital Insider, 22 September 2025

Read more

Trump administration slammed by scientists for claiming paracetamol use in pregnancy causes autism

UK experts have condemned “fearmongering” in the US amid reports surrounding an upcoming announcement from Donald Trump’s administration about a link between paracetamol use in pregnancy and autism.

Scientists have hit back, with one saying the claim “risks stigmatising families who have autistic children as having brought it on themselves”.

The Wall Street Journal reported that US health secretary Robert F Kennedy Jr is expected to say Tylenol – which is paracetamol in the UK – is a potential cause of autism.

In the UK, the NHS website says “paracetamol is the first choice of painkiller if you’re pregnant. It’s commonly taken during pregnancy and does not harm your baby”.

Dr Monique Botha, associate professor in social and developmental psychology at Durham University, said: “There are many studies which refute a link, but the most important was a Swedish study of 2.4 million births published in 2024 which used actual sibling data and found no relationship between exposure to paracetamol in utero and subsequent autism, ADHD or intellectual disability.

Dr Botha added: “There is no robust evidence or convincing studies to suggest there is any causal relationship and any conclusions being drawn to the contrary are often motivated, under-evidenced, and unsupported by the most robust methods to answering this question.

“I am exceptionally confident in saying that no relationship exists.

“Similarly, pain relief for pregnant women is woefully lacking and paracetamol is a much safer pain relief option during pregnancy than basically any other alternative and we need to take pain seriously for women, including whilst pregnant.

“The fearmongering will prevent women from accessing the appropriate care during pregnancy.

“Further, it risks stigmatising families who have autistic children as having brought it on themselves and reinvigorates the long pattern of maternal shame and blame as we’ve seen re-emerge repeatedly over the last 70 years where we try to pay the fault of autism at the mother’s door one way or another.”

Read full story

Source: The Independent, 23 September 2025

Read more

'National tragedy' as over 800 patients die amid 'extreme' A&E wait times

More than 800 patients died while enduring lengthy waits for admission to accident and emergency departments across Scotland last year, with the leading body of emergency medicine professionals warning of a “system in crisis.”

In what it described as a “national tragedy,” the Royal College of Emergency Medicine (RCEM) said there were an estimated 818 associated excess deaths related to stays of 12 hours or longer before being admitted to A&E departments.

The death toll - the equivalent of 16 people losing their lives every week - is up by almost a third compared to the 616 estimated deaths in 2023, a trend the RCEM said was “shocking.”

The new analysis by the college found that a record 76,510 patients waited 12 hours or more to be admitted, discharged, or transferred from A&E last year, some 20,432 higher than the figure in 2023. Of those patients, the majority - some 58,906 - were waiting to be admitted to a ward for further care.

Dr Fiona Hunter, vice president of RCEM Scotland, said: “The fact that the deaths of more than 800 patients have been lost due to a system in crisis is a national tragedy. Behind this statistic are stories of heartbreak. Because these are people. Mums, dads, brothers, sisters, grandparents - their deaths shattering the lives of families and friends.

“These are patients who are sick and need further care on a ward. So they are forced to endure extreme wait times for an inpatient bed to become available for them. Often, they will be experiencing this, counting the hours they have been in emergency departments, on a trolley in a corridor, cupboard, or simply any available floor space.”

Read full story

Source: The Scotsman, 23 September 2025

Read more

NHS risks missing ‘new era’ of Alzheimer’s treatment without major reforms, experts warn

The NHS is “simply not ready” for a new era of diagnosing and treating Alzheimer’s disease and is not “keeping pace with the science”, experts have warned.

New drugs and blood tests are set to transform Alzheimer’s care and diagnosis in the coming years, according to a group of 40 expert researchers.

Researchers also say medications donanemab and lecanemab, which are currently not approved for use by the NHS, slow the progression of Alzheimer’s as effectively as treatments for other conditions such as cancer, rheumatoid arthritis, and multiple sclerosis.

Writing in a series of papers published in The Lancet, they warn that without rapid reform, the potential of “major innovations” within Alzheimer’s research will not be realised.

Dr Richard Oakley, associate director of Research and Innovation at Alzheimer’s Society, said the series of papers published in The Lancet “mark the beginning of a new era in Alzheimer’s disease diagnosis and treatment”.

However, he added, “The painful truth is that the NHS is simply not ready and isn’t keeping pace with the science.

“We now run the very real risk that people living with dementia will miss out on the opportunity to benefit from these big breakthroughs.

“It’s vital that the UK government keeps its eye on the ball so people with dementia aren’t left behind. We want to see better access to early diagnosis so people don’t miss out on the narrow window of eligibility to benefit from treatments which can slow Alzheimer’s disease.

Read full story

Source: The Independent, 22 September 2025

Read more

Violence in GP surgeries driven by waiting times and drug refusals, global study shows

Violence and abuse by patients against staff in GP clinics is widespread globally and usually triggered by long waiting times and the refusal to prescribe requested drugs, research shows.

The findings are based on a 24-country study of the threats and aggression that family doctors, receptionists and other practice staff experience at work.

As many as nine out of 10 GP surgery personnel have suffered a physical or verbal assault during their career – in some cases the same proportion reported it over the previous 12 months.

The threatening behaviour can damage workers’ mental health, increase their stress levels and lead to them wanting to quit.

The research, by Shihning Chou, an associate professor of forensic psychology at the University of Nottingham, is the first to look at aggression against GP staff as a global phenomenon. She based her findings on an analysis of 50 previous studies from 24 countries, including the UK, China, Australia, Germany, Ireland, Kuwait and Barbados.

Prof Kamila Hawthorne, the chair of the Royal College of General Practitioners, which represents family doctors in the UK, said: “That incidences of abuse against GPs and our teams are so widespread – and as this research shows, not just in the UK – is extremely distressing. It’s entirely unacceptable for anyone working in general practice to be at the receiving end of abuse of any kind, when they’re just trying to do their jobs.”

Some assaults are so distressing that GPs call the police or remove perpetrators from their practice list, she added.

Read full story

Source: The Guardian, 23 September 2025

Read more

Jessica Brady's legacy inspires new life-saving GP safety rule

Patients with a potentially deadly illness will be diagnosed sooner through a new life-saving patient safety initiative called Jess’ Rule that is being rolled out across the NHS in England today.

Jess’s Rule is named in memory of Jessica Brady, who died of cancer in December 2020 at the age of 27, and will help avoid tragic, preventable deaths as GPs are supported to catch potentially deadly illnesses sooner. 

In the five months leading up to her death, Jessica had more than twenty appointments with her GP practice but eventually had to seek private healthcare. She was later diagnosed with stage 4 adenocarcinoma. With such an advanced disease there was no available treatment. She was admitted into hospital where she died three weeks later.

The new initiative will ask GPs to think again if, after three appointments, they have been unable to offer a substantiated diagnosis, or the patient’s symptoms have escalated.

While many GP practices already use similar approaches in complex cases, Jess’s Rule will make this standard practice across the country, aiming to reduce health inequalities and ensuring everyone – no matter their age or background – receives the same high standard of care.

Designed in collaboration with the Chair of Royal College of General Practitioners (RCGP) and NHS England, Jess’s Rule will help to catch serious conditions earlier and support GPs with guidelines that bolster their clinical judgment, while encouraging them to reflect, review and rethink if they are uncertain about a patients’ condition.

Jess’s Rule could support GPs to ensure continuity of care for patients with persistent health concerns. This could involve arranging face-to-face consultations if previous appointments were remote, conducting thorough physical examinations, or ordering additional diagnostic tests.

It also encourages GPs to review patient records comprehensively, seek second opinions from colleagues, and consider specialist referrals when appropriate.

Read full story

Source: Department of Health and Social Care, 23 September 2025

Read more
 

The 16 trusts forced to retest thousands of patients

The full list of 16 trusts which are retesting tens of thousands of patients who may have been wrongly diagnosed with diabetes can be revealed by HSJ.

Concerns about over-diagnosis first emerged last year, linked to problems with a device used to monitor glucose levels. But NHS England has so far declined to identify all the trusts involved.

Now, HSJ  has checked accreditation certifications to confirm which trusts use the Premier Hb9210 HbA1c analyser, manufactured by Trinity Biotech, and can reveal the full list for the first time.

They include several trusts not previously linked with the issue in public: Calderdale and Huddersfield Foundation Trust; Mid and South Essex FT; Airedale Hospitals; University Hospital Bristol and Weston FT; Stockport FT and Hull University Teaching Hospital Trust.

They join nine others who are publicly known to have been impacted following HSJ’s coverage last year, or information posted online. These are Norfolk and Norwich University Hospitals FT; South Tees Hospitals FT; York and Scarborough FT; West Hertfordshire Teaching Hospitals Trust; Maidstone and Tunbridge Wells Trust; Barking, Redbridge and Havering University Hospitals Trust; Chesterfield Royal Hospital FT; and County Durham and Darlington FT.

The Medicines and Healthcare products Regulatory Agency said in a notice in July it had received reports of a positive bias in results which have resulted in patients being incorrectly diagnosed as pre-diabetic. It said the manufacturer would update its instructions to clarify frequency of preventative maintenance required.

Read full story (paywalled)

Source: HSJ, 23 September 2025

Read more

USA: Trump officials reportedly set to tie Tylenol to autism risk

Donald Trump’s administration is on Monday expected to tie pregnant women’s use of the popular medicine Tylenol – known as paracetamol elsewhere in the world – to a risk of autism, contrary to medical guidelines, the Washington Post has reported.

Trump officials are also expected to announce an effort to explore how the cancer and anemia drug leucovorin could purportedly and potentially treat autism, according to the Post report published Sunday, which cited four sources with knowledge of the plans who spoke on the condition of anonymity because the announcement had not been made.

Medical guidelines say it is safe for pregnant women to take Tylenol, the over-the-counter pain medication whose active ingredient is known as acetaminophen in the US and paracetamol elsewhere in the world. But, as the Post noted, federal health officials have been reviewing previous research – including an August review by researchers from Harvard University and Mount Sinai hospital – that suggested a possible link between Tylenol use early in pregnancy and an increased risk of autism in children.

Earlier in September, the Wall Street Journal reported that Trump’s health secretary Robert F Kennedy Jr planned to announce that use of Tylenol by pregnant women was potentially linked to autism, which is defined as a neurodevelopmental condition marked by social as well as communication difficulties and behaviors that are repetitive.

As the Post reported, some medical trials involving administering leucovorin to children with autism have shown “what some scientists describe as remarkable improvements in their ability to speak and understand others” – though those trials are considered early.

Kennedy has claimed that the US is in the grip of an “autism epidemic” fuelled by “environmental toxins”.

Read full story

Source: The Guardian, 21 September 2025

Read more

Racism and marginalisation led to ‘tragic outcomes’

“Racism and marginalisation” at Nottingham University Hospitals Trust meant families “felt pushed out” and resulted in “tragic outcomes”, according to the chair of the inquiry into its maternity services. 

Senior midwife Donna Ockenden told HSJ’s Patient Safety Congress that talking to the hospitals’ “wider community” found “significant evidence of racism, marginalisation… ignoring, turning the backs on” people.

“A whole community felt pushed out in the cold,” she said, and families had been confronting a “brick wall” when dealing with the maternity unit.

They met an attitude from staff that “you are not coming in here, we are not listening to you, you can’t be in labour, we know what we are doing, and you don’t,” Ms Ockenden said. “There were a number of really tragic outcomes, with babies being born in the wrong place without the correct equipment.”

Some 2,460 families’ cases are now formally included in the review, and there were a further 520 which could be learned from, she said. There are 850 current and former staff engaged, and Ms Ockenden said she was working closely with current trust leadership. She said several senior doctors had told her team they had raised safety issues at earlier stages.

Read full story (paywalled)

Source: HSJ, 22 September 2025

Read more

Calls to overhaul NHS spending to fund weight-loss jabs for millions

Ministers should overhaul the NHS spending watchdog to enable millions more people to be put on weight-loss jabs, Tony Blair’s think tank has said.

Experts are calling for the National Institute for Health and Care Excellence (Nice), which decides which drugs the NHS should buy, to start factoring in the wider economic benefits of medication rather than just their health effect.

The Tony Blair Institute for Global Change (TBI) has calculated that giving weight-loss jabs such as Mounjaro and Wegovy to 15 million eligible overweight adults would save the economy £52 billion in the long term. By cutting rates of illnesses such as heart disease, people would stay in work for longer, saving billions of pounds in benefit payments and increasing tax revenues.

There are 15 million obese adults in the UK who could benefit from weight-loss jabs but the NHS is embarking on a rollout of Mounjaro, offering it to just 220,000 people over three years. The NHS has said it cannot afford a mass introduction.

Dr Charlotte Refsum, the director of health policy at TBI, said Nice should consider “the wider economic benefit of medications because a healthy working-age population drives economic growth”. She added: “Prevention should be part of the Treasury’s growth agenda and Nice’s remit should be expanded to consider the macroeconomic benefits of medicines, including anti-obesity drugs.”

Read full story (paywalled)

Source: The Times, 19 September 2025

Read more

Student left in agony after untreated decay led to abscess that nearly caused sepsis

A student described as "traumatised" has been awarded a £26,000 settlement from her former dental practice after alleged negligence led to a severe abscess and a near-sepsis incident.

Katelyn De Blick, then 16 and from Keighley, West Yorkshire, sought treatment at her local Skipton Road Mydentist practice in summer 2021 for a cracked tooth. Instead of addressing underlying decay, the tooth was reportedly cleaned and covered with a sealant.

Weeks later, Ms De Blick returned to the practice experiencing "severe pain and a swollen jaw."

She was diagnosed with a potential infected abscess, given antibiotics, and advised to attend A&E if her condition worsened.

As the "throbbing, stabbing" pain and swelling persisted, Katelyn’s mother took her to Airedale General Hospital’s A&E department.

There, she was informed that the tooth required immediate removal and that the abscess posed a significant risk of causing sepsis.

She subsequently underwent surgery under general anaesthetic at Bradford Royal Infirmary. Medics removed the tooth and drained the abscess externally, leaving her with a "painful" open wound for several weeks and a lasting 50p-sized scar.

“The whole experience was traumatic.”

After being put in touch with the Dental Law Partnership, which completed further investigations and analysis, it was revealed Katelyn’s dentists failed to diagnose and treat decay for years.

The progression of the decay resulted in the infected abscess, the emergency hospital admission and the need for an operation and tooth removal, all of which “could have been easily avoided”.

“It was frustrating and devastating to hear that, if they had just taken a few more minutes to clean (the tooth), then I wouldn’t have had to go through all of this,” she said.

The Dental Law Partnership took on Katelyn’s case in 2021 and it was successfully settled in January 2025, when she was paid £26,000 in an out-of-court settlement.

Read full story

Source: The Independent, 22 September 2025

Read more
 

Ambulance staff arrested in deaths probe

Two ambulance workers in the South West have been arrested as part of a major investigation into six deaths, a trust and police have confirmed.

Wiltshire police today said a man in his 30s was arrested in June 2024 on suspicion of six counts of gross negligence manslaughter and four counts of ill-treatment or wilful neglect by a care worker, while a 59-year-old woman was arrested in March this year on suspicion of gross negligence manslaughter.

Both individuals, who have since been released on conditional bail, were employees of South West Ambulance Service Foundation Trust in 2023 when Wiltshire police began its investigation following an initial report.

SWASFT confirmed that both individuals were suspended “as soon as the trust became aware of any concerns” and that one of the two individuals “is no longer employed by the trust”.

Police said the arrests relate to an investigation into “several adult deaths in and around Wiltshire”.

SWASFT said it wanted to “reassure people that this is an isolated situation and there is no on-going risk to patients”.

Read full story (paywalled)

Source: HSJ, 19 September 2025

Read more

CEO blames IT system for diagnostics slump

A chief executive has blamed his trust’s electronic patient record for the collapse of its diagnostic performance.

Professor Clive Kay told his board at King’s College Hospital Foundation Trust that the implementation of Epic in October 2023 had contributed to the organisation dropping to the bottom tenth of national rankings for diagnostic waiting times.

At last week’s public meeting, Professor Kay said the trust had fallen from being ranked 11th-best nationally for diagnostic waits to 11th from the bottom.

“As good as Epic is, the radiology elements of Epic were really very challenging for colleagues,” he told his board.

Electronic patient record systems from USA-based Epic have a reputation for having a lot of functionality, but being particularly expensive.    

While the rollout did not affect the range of diagnostic tests the trust was able to carry out, it caused significant disruption, including data migration discrepancies that affected the accuracy and availability of migrated records, as well as a number of manual workarounds required.

While no patient harm has been identified, a review is underway which includes a structured harm assessment.

Read full story (paywalled)

Source: HSJ, 19 September 2025

Related reading on the hub:

Electronic patient record systems: Putting patient safety at the heart of implementation

 

Read more

Turkey dental work leaves woman in constant pain

A woman has said she is living in constant pain and is unable to breathe through her nose after having dental work in Turkey.

Leanne Abeyance, 41, from Telford, said she had been left with a painful, infected face and the implants could not be removed due to the infections.

Her dental work also caused a collapsed septum which she said the NHS would not fix as it was deemed a cosmetic procedure.

She spent £3,000 on the initial treatment, she said, and has since spent another £2,000 on private work at home to relieve the pain. The government has warned people about the risks of travelling abroad for cosmetic procedures.

"Every day I wake up and I can't breathe through my nose," Ms Abeyance, a DJ and producer, said.

She decided to travel to Antalya in April 2024 to get four dental implants after previously having veneers fitted in the country.

She said she had been quoted about £50,000 to get the work done in the UK but found a dental practice in Antalya which took £3,000 in cash up front.

The NHS guidance is that while being treated abroad might be cheaper than the UK, the risks need to be weighed against the savings.

It adds that patients should consult their NHS dentist first as standards vary in different countries.

Read full story

Source: BBC News, 17 September 2025

Read more

USA: CDC panel recommends multiple shots for measles, mumps, rubella and chickenpox instead of single vaccine

A powerful vaccines committee for the US Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) voted on Thursday to change US vaccine policy and start recommending that children receive multiple vaccines to protect against measles, mumps, rubella and chickenpox, instead of a single vaccine that can protect against all four diseases.

The new recommendations from the panel, the advisory committee on immunization practices (ACIP), arrived just a day after top former CDC officials said Robert F Kennedy Jr was a threat to US children’s ability to receive vaccines on schedule. The committee’s work typically determines which vaccines are provided free of charge through the US government, shapes state and local laws around vaccine requirements, and influences which vaccines health insurers tend to cover.

Previously, the panel had recommended that children receive the MMRV vaccine, which offers combined protections against measles, mumps, rubella and chickenpox, which is also known as varicella. Parents could still choose to immunize their children through multiple vaccines. Under the committee’s new recommendations, children should receive multiple vaccines: one vaccine that guards against measles, mumps and rubella, which is known as the MMR vaccine, and a separate vaccine that immunizes them against chickenpox.

However, the committee also voted not to change the vaccines that are provided free to low-income children through a US government program called Vaccines for Children. That discrepancy sparked outcry and confusion among several members of the committee, who at times seemed unsure about the meaning of their votes.

The panel has already drawn extensive criticism, as Kennedy, who leads the Department of Health and Human Services and has repeatedly questioned the safety of vaccines, fired its previous members and replaced them with his own handpicked advisers. Several of his advisers have little to no documented expertise with vaccines or have criticised them.

Read full story

Source: The Guardian, 18 September 2025

Read more

England’s social care system is at ‘breaking point’, government warned

England’s social care system is at “breaking point”, with the number of unpaid carers increasing by 70% over the past two decades, according to a report.

Research for the Institute of Public Policy Research (IPPR) found rising demand, shrinking supply, and a growing reliance on unpaid carers.

Analysis for the report, conducted by the Joseph Rowntree Foundation (JRF), revealed the number of people providing 35 hours or more a week of care increased from 1.1 million in 2003/04 to 1.9 million in 2023/24.

The report says unpaid care – whether by parents, spouses or adult children, and most frequently women – is relied on too heavily to fill in the gaps of the “inadequate and expensive” adult social care system.

Abby Jitendra, author of the IPPR discussion paper and principal policy adviser at JRF, said: “Millions of us are carers or need care, and this number will surge in the future, but families are being left to navigate a neglected system – paying sky-high costs, sacrificing work to care, and too often going without the support they need.

“We need to build a care system that works like a public service: universal, affordable, reliable and fair. That means bold reform now – not another decade of drift.”

Read full story

Source: The Independent, 19 September 2025

Read more

Cost of private psychology soars in UK as practitioners turn away clients

The cost of seeing private psychologists is soaring and many are so busy they are turning away new clients, research has found.

The prices psychologists charge have risen by 34% since 2022 and 12 sessions now cost an average of £1,550, compared with £1,152 just three years ago, according to a survey by myTribe Insurance, which tracks the cost of private medical care.

Almost three in 10 (29%) psychologists are already treating so many patients that they are not taking on new ones, according to a survey of practitioners across the UK.

The sometimes months-long delays people face in their efforts to access NHS mental healthcare and the record number of people seeking help, usually for anxiety or depression, appear to underlie the double-whammy facing patients of fee uplifts and closed waiting lists.

Chris Steele, the founder of myTribe Insurance, said: “What we’ve seen over the last three years is a market that has become significantly more expensive for patients. A 34% rise in consultation fees is not just a statistic. It shows how private talking therapies are moving further out of reach for many people who need them.”

While many people are seeking help from a psychologist in private practice, the survey of 349 practitioners found that doing so can involve high prices, long waits and online-only care.

Read full story

Source: The Guardian, 18 September 2025

Read more

UK doctors guilty of sexual misconduct are not being struck off, research finds

UK doctors who are guilty of sexual misconduct are not being appropriately sanctioned due to weak disciplinary processes, research reveals.

Nearly a quarter (24%) of doctors found guilty of sexual misconduct were handed suspensions but allowed to continue working in medicine, according to analysis of fitness to practice tribunals by the Royal College of Surgeons (RCS). This is despite the regulator, the General Medical Council (GMC), recommending they be struck off the medical register.

The GMC investigates complaints against doctors and refers the most serious cases to the Medical Practitioners Tribunal Service (MPTS) to adjudicate on whether they remain fit to practice.

The study analysed 222 new MPTS tribunal cases between August 2023 and August 2024 and found that out of the 46 proven cases of sexual misconduct identified, the MPTS imposed the same disciplinary sanction as the GMC recommended in 35. In 11 cases, the MPTS decided to only suspend the doctor rather than erase them from the medical register, and in no case did the MPTS impose a tougher sanction.

Mei Nortley, a consultant vascular surgeon and lead author of the research, said: “We hope this study aids the MPTS to reflect on whether it delivers its aims of protecting the public, ensuring doctors meet professional standards and promoting public confidence in the medical profession. Allowing rapists, sexual predators and those who use manipulation and coercion to return as practising doctors brings this into question.”

The research, published in the Bulletin of the Royal College of Surgeons of England, found that all perpetrators were male doctors, with more than 80% holding positions of authority. Several cases involved multiple targets, showing repeated and systemic abuse.

Read full story

Source: The Guardian, 18 September 2025

Read more

Joint executive team to be set up across DHSC and NHS England

A single joint executive team will be established at the Department of Health and Social Care (DHSC) and NHS England as part of the transition to one organisation.

It will provide unified leadership across both organisations, bringing policy and delivery together. The team will manage directors from related work areas from 3 November 2025 and will begin to combine resources.

In March, the Prime Minister announced NHS England would be brought back into DHSC to end the duplication resulting from two organisations doing the same job in a system currently holding staff back from delivering for patients. By stripping back layers of red tape and bureaucracy, more resources will be put back into the frontline rather than being spent on unnecessary admin.  

The single Joint Executive Team will comprise of:

  • Professor Chris Whitty – Chief Medical Officer
  • Tom Riordan – Chief Operating Officer/Second Permanent Secretary
  • Matthew Style – Director General, System Development (working with Glen Burley who continues as NHSE’s Financial Reset and Accountability Director)
  • Duncan Burton – Chief Nursing Officer for England
  • Catherine Frances – Director General, Global, Public Health and Emergencies
  • Professor Lucy Chappell – Chief Scientific Adviser and Director General, Science and Research
  • Sally Warren – Interim Director General, Adult Social Care (recruitment to the permanent role began in July)
  • TBC – Interim Director General, Technology and Data (recruitment to the permanent role will take place during autumn)
  • Elizabeth O’Mahony – Interim Director General, Finance (recruitment to the permanent role began in August)
  • David Probert – Interim Director General, Performance and Delivery (and continuing as NHS England’s Interim Deputy CEO)
  • Jo Lenaghan – Interim Director General, People (recruitment to the permanent role began in August)
  • Dr Claire Fuller and Professor Meghana Pandit – Interim Medical Directors (recruitment to the permanent role will take place during autumn)
  • TBC – Interim Director General, Strategy and Healthcare Policy (recruitment to the permanent role began in July)
  • TBC – Interim Director General, Commercial and Growth (recruitment to the permanent role began earlier in September)

Joint regional teams are also being established to serve as the delivery arm of the centre, driving improvement and performance locally.

Regional leadership:

  • Louise Shepherd – Regional Director, North West
  • Fiona Edwards – Regional Director, North East & Yorkshire
  • Dale Bywater – Regional Director, Midlands
  • Clare Panniker – Regional Director, East of England
  • Caroline Clarke – Regional Director, London
  • Sue Doheny – Regional Director, South West (while Elizabeth O’Mahony is NHS England’s Chief Financial Officer)
  • Anne Eden – Regional Director, South East (until she leaves at the end of March)

Existing DHSC Regional Public Health Directors will begin to report into Regional Directors in the same area from 3 November, subject to appropriate consultation, while continuing to work with the Director General of Public Health and Emergencies.

National Priority Programmes are also being set up to drive delivery of the government’s key health priorities, drawing together teams and expertise from across the organisations and the country.

National Priority Programmes:

  • Mark Cubbon – National Priority Programme Director for Planned Care
  • Sarah-Jane Marsh – National Priority Programme Director for Urgent and Emergency Care
  • Duncan Burton – Interim National Priority Programme Director for Maternity, Women’s Health, Children & Young People
  • Dr Claire Fuller – Interim National Priority Programme Director for Neighbourhood Health 
  • Recruitment to the role of National Priority Programme Director for Mental Health, Learning Disability & Autism will start shortly.
  • Dr Amanda Doyle will continue as NHSE’s National Director of Primary Care and Community Services, and Glen Burley will continue as NHSE’s Financial Reset and Accountability Director, both reporting to the NHSE CEO.

Read full story

Source: Department of Health and Social Care, 18 September 2025

Read more

Gen X issued health warning after millions miss out on vital ‘mid-life MOT’

A watchdog has urged greater awareness for the NHS Health Check after revealing over a third of adults are unfamiliar with the service.

The screening is commonly referred to as the "mid-life MOT." But Healthwatch England found 36% of adults unaware of the vital screening.

A new poll further indicates that many eligible individuals are not receiving invitations. The Savanta survey of 7,407 adults in England found 55% of eligible men and 53% of eligible women have never been invited for the "vital" check-up.

However, around three in five respondents (62% of men and 60% of women) reported attending every health check they were invited to.

“The NHS Health Check is a vital prevention tool, but it only works if people are invited, understand its purpose, and feel motivated to attend,” said Louise Ansari, chief executive at Healthwatch England.

“Our research shows we must ensure that everyone eligible for the Health Check receives an invitation and is given clear information on why it is important.

“Key to this will be using trusted sources like GPs to reach those most at risk.”

Read full story

Source: The Independent, 18 September 2025

Read more
×
  • Create New...

Important Information

We have placed cookies on your device to help make this website better. You can adjust your cookie settings, otherwise we'll assume you're okay to continue.