Jump to content
  • articles
    9,954
  • comments
    84
  • views
    12,750,634

Contributors to this article

About this News

Articles in the news

 

USA: ‘Distracting the public’: group of health professionals call for RFK Jr to be removed

A grassroots organization of health professionals has released a report outlining major health challenges in the US and calling for the removal of Robert F Kennedy Jr from the US Department of Health and Human Services (HHS).

The report from Defend Public Health, a new organization of about 3,000 health professionals and allies, is an attempt to get ahead of misinformation and lack of information from health officials.

In an effort to keep making progress in public health, Defend Public Health’s report was slated to coincide with that of the anticipated second US report to “make America healthy again” (Maha). The first Maha report was released in May, and a second report was expected this week – but amid turmoil at the health agencies, it has reportedly been delayed for several weeks.

“The Maha report is essentially a distraction from the real causes of poor health,” said Elizabeth Jacobs, professor emerita at the University of Arizona and a founding member of Defend Public Health.

“This administration does not want to address things like poverty and education and access to healthcare. Instead, they’re distracting the public with information on solutions to problems that don’t actually exist. When the foundation of your policy is not evidence-based, it will collapse.”

Read full story

Source: The Guardian, 13 August 2025

Read more

NHSE admits service not on course to hit 2025-26 waiting list targets

NHS England’s elective chief has admitted the service is not on course to hit the main 2025-26 elective care targets and has “more to do” to bring performance “back in line”.

Mark Cubbon said progress to ensure 65% of elective patients are treated within 18 weeks and to reduce 52-week waiters to 1% of the overall waiting list had slowed in recent months. 

Speaking to HSJ exclusively ahead of today’s release of the official monthly statistics, he said: “We saw a very positive start to the year for RTT [referral to treatment pathway]. But while we are seeing encouraging progress in some providers with long waits, there is more to do to bring this position back in line.”

Mr Cubbon’s warning comes the day after two of the country’s leading think tanks accused ministers of using misleading indicators to suggest the NHS was recovering more strongly than it is. 

Mr Cubbon’s warning that the service was on course to miss the 2025-26 waiting list targets follows the news that four trusts have been moved into NHSE’s most challenged category for elective performance in an “exceptional” move outside the normal schedule, due to concerns among national leaders about their long waits, as revealed by HSJ  earlier in August.

Read full story (paywalled)

Source: HSJ, 14 August 2025

Read more

AI could soon detect early voice box cancer from the sound of your voice

AI could soon be able to tell whether patients have cancer of the voice box using just a voice note, according to new research.

Scientists recorded the voices of men with and without abormalities in their vocal folds - which can be an early sign of laryngeal cancer - and found differences in vocal qualities including pitch, volume, and clarity. They now say AI could be used to detect these “vocal biomarkers”, leading to earlier, less invasive diagnosis.

Researchers at Oregon Health and Science University believe voice notes could now be used to train an AI tool that recognises vocal fold lesions.

Using 12,523 voice recordings from 306 participants across North America, they found distinctive vocal differences in men suffering from laryngeal cancer, men with vocal fold lesions, and men with healthy vocal folds. However, researchers said similar hallmark differences were not detected in women.

They are now hoping to collect more recordings of people with and without the distinctive vocal fold lesions to create a bigger dataset for tools to work from.

It comes after research from US-based Klick Labs, which created an AI model capable of distinguishing whether a person has Type 2 diabetes from six to 10 seconds of voice audio. The study involved analysing 18,000 recordings in order to identify acoustic features that differentiated non diabetics from diabetics and reported an 89 per cent accuracy rating for women and 86 per cent for men.

Read full story

Source: The Independent, 13 August 2025

Read more

Ministers using ‘misleading indicator’ to champion waiting list reduction

The recent reduction in the waiting list repeatedly cited by ministers as evidence of the NHS’s recovery has given a “misleading” impression to the public about the service’s underlying performance, two leading think tanks have warned.

The warning follows health and social care secretary Wes Streeting announcing last month that the reduction in the elective waiting list by “more than 260,000 since we took office” was “not a coincidence”, but was because this government had got “our NHS moving in the right direction”.

However, a new report shared exclusively with HSJ  concludes recent waiting list reductions were mainly due to “unreported removals”. These removals are not explicitly reported in published data, so researchers have had to calculate them manually.

They include removals following list validation exercises, but also a range of other factors, such as the design of the data reporting methods and the nature of software management processes.

And when factoring in these removals, the report from Quality Watch, a joint funded-project between The Health Foundation and the Nuffield Trust, concludes the majority of the waiting list reduction was therefore not produced by increased clinical activity.

Read full story (paywalled)

Source: HSJ, 13 August 2025

Read more

ADHD drugs have wider life benefits, study suggests

Drug treatment can help people newly diagnosed with ADHD (attention deficit hyperactivity disorder) to reduce their risk of substance misuse, suicidal behaviour, transport accidents and criminality, a study suggests.

These issues are linked to common ADHD symptoms such as acting impulsively and becoming easily distracted.

Some 5% of children and 2.5% of adults worldwide are thought to be affected by the disorder - and growing numbers are being diagnosed.

The findings, published in the BMJ, confirm the wider potential benefits of drug treatment and could help patients decide whether to start medication, the researchers say.

"Oftentimes there is no information on what the risks are if you don't treat ADHD," said Prof Samuele Cortese, study author and professor of child and adolescent psychiatry at University of Southampton.

"Now we have evidence they [drugs] can reduce these risks."

This could be explained by medication reducing impulsive behaviour and lack of concentration, which might reduce the risk of accidents while driving and reduce aggressive behaviour which could lead to criminality.

Accessing the right medication for ADHD in many countries is not easy, with some drugs in short supply. In the UK waiting times to see specialists after diagnosis in order to access drugs can be several years.

Read full story

Source: BBC News, 14 August 2025

Read more

USA: Hospitals among top targets in $34M crypto ransomware spree

A ransomware group known as Embargo has extorted millions of dollars from victims in the USA, including hospitals, according to research from blockchain intelligence firm TRM Labs.

Embargo, which operates under a ransomware-as-a-service model, emerged in April 2024 and has since been tied to an estimated $34.2 million in cryptocurrency transactions. 

Most victims are in the healthcare, business services and manufacturing sectors, with some ransom demands reaching $1.3 million.

Notable US victims include American Associated Pharmacies, Memorial Hospital and Manor in Bainbridge, Ga., and Weiser Memorial Hospital in Weiser, Idaho. The group disproportionately targets US organisations, TRM Labs said, likely because they are seen as more able to pay large ransoms.

Healthcare organisations are particularly attractive targets because operational disruptions can affect patient care, according to TRM Labs.

Read full story

Source: Becker's Health IT, 11 August 2025

Read more

Hackers breach cancer screening data of almost 500,000 women

Personal health data from more than 485,000 women has been stolen after hackers accessed the IT systems of a cervical cancer screening programme in the Netherlands. 

The incident occurred between 3 July and 6 July 2025 at the Eurofins Clinical Diagnostics NMDL laboratory in Rijswijk, which tests cervical smears and self-tests for the Dutch Population Survey (BDO).

Cyber criminals are believed to have accessed sensitive patient information including names, addresses, dates of birth, citizen service numbers, test results, and participants’ healthcare providers, according to a press release from the BDO.

Elza den Hertog, chair of the board of directors of BDO, said: “We are deeply shocked by this data breach, and we understand that participants who participated in population screening through us are also very shocked.”

She added: “Participating in the cervical cancer screening programme is already a stressful experience for many participants and now you’re being told that your personal data may have been leaked as well. 

“At BDO, we set high standards for due diligence and data security for participants in the screening programmes, and we always make agreements about this with the laboratories that perform the tests. 

“We deeply regret that this has now gone so wrong at one of the laboratories we work with.”

Commenting on the breach, Rik Ferguson, vice president of security intelligence at Forescout, said: “This breach is a clear example of a systemic blind spot. 

“Almost half a million highly sensitive medical records were exposed because they passed through a subcontracted lab where attackers found a way in. 

“The result is not just another breach statistic; it’s a demonstration of how quickly a single weak link can compromise an entire security chain.

“What happened here fits a much broader pattern. Healthcare has become a prime target because the data is priceless, the networks are complex, and the sector is under constant pressure to deliver more with less.”

Read full story

Source: Digital Health, 13 August 2025

Read more

Thousands of men with prostate cancer facing unnecessary overtreatment, experts warn

Up to 5,000 men every year could be facing unnecessary overtreatment for prostate cancer due to ‘outdated’ guidelines, a charity has warned.

Overtreatment of the disease can lead to side effects such as erectile dysfunction or incontinence, according to Prostate Cancer UK.

Patients whose cancer is unlikely to progress may only need close monitoring. But experts say out-of-date guidance from the National Institute of Health and Care Excellence (Nice) has created a "wild west" of what is implemented in the NHS.

NICE guidance currently only advises active surveillance as the preferred approach for men who have the lowest-risk cancer. But these guidelines have not been updated since 2021, and the Prostate Cancer UK argues they do not take into account advances in testing and diagnosis.

Professor Vincent Gnanapragasam, professor of urology at the University of Cambridge, said: “Active surveillance is the best treatment option for men whose cancer is unlikely to progress or cause them problems in their lifetime.

“But NICE’s outdated guidelines have created a deeply concerning wild west on how surveillance is implemented by different health care teams. This inconsistency is resulting in a lack of confidence from patients in surveillance, who may instead opt to have treatment they may not have ever needed, risking harmful side effects.”

Read full story

Source: The Independent, 12 August 2025

Read more

NHS announces big change to how expectant mothers access maternity care

Expectant mothers across England will now be able to directly book appointments with midwives, bypassing the need for an initial GP visit, in a move designed to alleviate pressure on family doctors.

NHS officials said the change aims to free up tens of thousands of GP appointments.

Historically, women would first consult their family doctor before being referred for maternity care.

While online self-referral options have been introduced by local health bodies in recent years, only half of expectant mothers have used these services directly.

This has led many to still attend what NHS leaders described as "unnecessary" GP appointments to access maternity care.

The new system allows women to self-refer to local maternity services "at the touch of a button" via nhs.uk.

Officials stressed that women can still see a GP if they would like to, adding that some with long-term health conditions will need to discuss changes to their care or treatment plans with a doctor.

NHS England said that it is estimated that the new service could lead to 180,000 fewer calls to GPs and up to 30,000 fewer general practice appointments each year.

Read full story

Source: The Independent, 12 August 2025

Read more

NHS official admits ‘what we did wasn’t enough’ for 14-year-old who died under care of mental health hospital

A senior doctor has admitted that the NHS did not do enough for a 14-year-old who died under the care of a private hospital it sent her to and kept her in despite knowing it was understaffed daily, an inquest has heard.

The doctor, Dr Gillian Combe, has also warned that children’s mental health units across the country are struggling to staff their wards every day and that the NHS does not have the money to build its own wards.

Ruth Szymankiewicz died after self-harming while she was left alone at Huntercombe Hospital, also called Taplow Manor, near Maidenhead in Berkshire, despite requiring constant one-to-one observation, Buckinghamshire Coroner’s Court was told last week.

On Monday, Dr Combe, a clinical director for the Thames Valley provider collaborative, which is responsible for commissioning children’s inpatient mental health care for the area, gave evidence.

She told the jury there no other choice but to admit Ruth to Taplow Manor’s psychiatric intensive care unit (PICU) on 4 October 2021, despite a warning from her parents that this was not appropriate for her.

A month later, Dr Nishchint Warikoo Ruth psychiatrist at Taplow Manor, made a referral to the NHS asking for her to be moved to a different unit, as the PICU “environment wasn’t the best for [her]...but that there wasn’t any other suitable place”.

When asked about Ruth’s admission to the hospital, Dr Combe said: “We had concerns, I was in the [provider collaborative] we had the CQC, we were living and breathing trying to turn this hospital around but hospitals around the country were facing the same challenges…all the units were really struggling…it was a really stretched really difficult system.”

“We were really trying and I’m really sorry, what we did it wasn’t enough for Ruth but we were really trying so hard to come alongside as the NHS to help this hospital improve,” she said.

“We were in a situation where beds were closing across the country. We have seen mainly independent sector providers pull out across the country…there were really high level discussions we decided we would throw everything at Huntercombe Maidehead and we worked really hard.”

When asked if the provider collaborative was aware of the staffing issues at Taplow Manor, Dr Combes said: “Yes…absolutely they were struggling on a daily basis…there are training issues we don’t train enough nurses it difficult to recruit every day on my ward we’re struggling to staff up to the next day and this is happening all across the country. It is really tough all the time.”

She also revealed that the NHS had quality concerns over other PICUs across the country, and all were struggling with staffing.

Dr Combes admitted, “The NHS does not have the capital to build the hospitals for these young people that we desperately need. This is embedded in my lessons learned following the closure of the Huntercombe, it is a massive problem.”

Read full story

Source: The Independent, 12 August 2025

Read more

Patients like a medic in a white coat, but often mistake female doctors for nurses

Patients see doctors in a white coat as professional and trustworthy but often mistake a female medic wearing one for a nurse or medical assistant, a study has found.

Female physicians are “unfairly judged based on appearance and attire, which affected patients’ perceptions of professionalism and competency”, according to a global review of the evidence around patients’ impressions of what doctors wear.

“Female physicians are often judged more on appearance than their male counterparts,” it said.

“The way female physicians dress significantly influences perceptions of competence and professionalism, highlighting the gendered expectations that patients hold.

“Even when male and female physicians wore identical attire, female physicians were still more likely to be misidentified as nurses or medical assistants.”

The researchers found that “gender-related perceptions of physician attire” existed across the 13 countries studied, including the US, India, Japan, China and Germany.

Such behaviour is so widespread that hospitals and other healthcare providers should try to reduce bias among patients and “foster equitable perceptions” of male and female medics, they add.

Read full story

Source: The Guardian, 12 August 2025

Read more

Bristol surgeon struck off after leaving patients in agony following 'mesh' surgery

A surgeon who performed artificial mesh operations unnecessarily on more than 200 patients at two hospitals in Bristol has been struck off the medical register.  

Anthony Dixon was found to have left patients in agony following bowel surgery at the Southmead and Spire Hospitals. 

Mr Dixon denied the claims against him in two separate tribunals but the Medical Practitioners Tribunal Service hearing (MPTS) ordered his removal from the medical register. 

Allegations about his conduct first arose 8 years ago. 

He was one of the UK’s leading surgeons based at Southmead Hospital and Spire Hospital in Bristol where he’d pioneered the use of artificial mesh to treat prolapsed bowels. 

Over the two medical tribunals, it emerged that he had failed to gain informed consent to operate on five patients and acted dishonestly by fabricating patients’ records long after his involvement in their care. 

Three years ago a review by Southmead Hospital found more than 200 patients were operated on unnecessarily and dozens were left in agony. 

Read full story

Source: ITVX, 6 August 2025

Read more

Not ‘built in a vacuum’: How Mount Sinai became the 1st to roll out a new Epic tool

In the US, Miami-based Mount Sinai Medical Center is among the first health systems to deploy a new AI-powered tool from Epic as the organisation looks to better serve its Spanish-speaking patient population.

The tool is a Spanish-language version of Epic’s Augmented Response Technology (ART), which uses generative AI to analyse messages sent through MyChart and draft suggested replies for providers to review, edit and send.

The rollout builds on Mount Sinai’s early adoption of the English-language version of ART in 2023, which was driven by a surge in patient portal messages during the COVID-19 pandemic. According to Tom Gillette, CIO at Mount Sinai Medical Center, message volume spiked fivefold during that time as patients increasingly turned to digital channels for advice, prescriptions and follow-ups.

“Layer on top of that, more than 60% of Miami-Dade County speaks Spanish, and about 30% of our patient population has indicated Spanish as their preferred language in Epic,” Mr. Gillette said in an interview with Becker’s. “So extending our ART experience into Spanish was a natural next step.”

Mount Sinai worked closely with Epic on the development and testing of the Spanish-language tool, beginning in December 2024. The effort included IT leaders, bilingual physicians and care teams.

“Our clinicians were intimately involved in shaping this,” Mr. Gillette said. “They helped ensure the messages not only translated correctly, but also made sense medically and aligned with our clinical voice.”

While the tool was technically straightforward to deploy, Mr. Gillette emphasised the importance of rigorous validation—particularly in ensuring that clinical responses in Spanish are not just grammatically correct, but clinically appropriate.

“Accuracy was critical,” he said. “We had to be sure the AI wasn’t missing anything or mistranslating medical concepts.”

Beyond translation, the project raised deeper questions about consistency in clinical communication. Mount Sinai’s team engaged in “prompt engineering” to define organisation-wide standards for AI-generated drafts.

“When a patient says, ‘I think I have a UTI,’ one doctor might say, ‘Come in and see me,’ another might suggest an e-visit, and another might just offer advice,” Mr. Gillette said. “So we had to ask: What’s the response we want to start with? What reflects our standard of care?”

Read full story

Source: Becker's Health IT, 8 August 2025

Read more

NHSE launches programme to enable ‘patient power payments’

Work has begun to create a new national feedback system to support the government’s proposed “patient power payments”, which would see individual members of the public able to affect how much money providers and commissioners receive for treating them.

A government procurement notice  states a contract to “scope and design a future model and implementation roadmap for the system-wide collection, analysis, presentation and use of feedback from people receiving care across the NHS” will be awarded by early November 2025. 

The work will “contribute innovative thinking and delivery expertise” to a new national programme, entitled: “The Future of Patient Feedback – A Roadmap for Measurement, Insight and Improvement”.

The 10-Year Health Plan stated the government’s intention to “trial new patient power payments”. These would involve patients being contacted to ask “whether the full payment for the costs of their care should be released to the provider or whether a proportion should go instead to a regional improvement fund”.

The plan added: “We believe this will make providers pay much more attention to the experiences of their patients. These payments could be particularly powerful in clinical services which have failed to engage with and respond to patient concerns for too long.”

Read full story (paywalled)

Source: HSJ, 12 August 2025

Read more

Knee implant used by NHS known for years to be faulty

A knee-replacement implant, used in thousands of UK operations, was known to have a concerning failure rate eight years before it was finally withdrawn, the BBC has discovered.

Patients have told File on 4 Investigates how they were left immobile or addicted to painkillers after receiving the NexGen knee implant, because it ended up slipping out of place. Hundreds of people have now had to undergo a second corrective operation.

Knee surgeons say the implant's US manufacturer, Zimmer Biomet, took too long to acknowledge there was a problem with one particular component.

Zimmer Biomet says patient safety is its "top priority" and that its products are approved in accordance with the relevant regulations.

Debbie Booker from Southampton had an operation to replace her left knee in 2016.

Although initially it appeared to have been successful, she started to experience severe pain a year later while on holiday in Majorca.

"I laid a bag of ice on my knee and for four days I had to do that every few hours because I was in agony," she says.

Debbie says the pain resulted from the knee implant slipping from the tibia and wearing away the bone.

Over the next few months she says she became reliant on prescription painkillers: "I was on fentanyl and morphine. It took me a long time to come off of the morphine because I was addicted."

Zimmer Biomet started marketing this modified version in 2012. It was cheaper than the earlier model, so it made financial sense for the NHS, according to Prof David Barrett, a knee specialist at Southampton University.

"[The NHS] were justified by saying, 'we have every reason to think it'll be fine,'" he says.

In the decade that followed, more than 10,000 patients were fitted with this version of the implant.

However, File on 4 Investigates has discovered that concerns were first flagged in 2014 by the National Joint Registry (NJR) which keeps a record of implant surgery across England, Wales and Northern Ireland.

At that point, there was insufficient data to draw any reliable conclusions, the NJR told us. It is not an easy task to isolate a specific component that is not working as it should, it added.

Read full story

Source: BBC News, 12 August 2025

Read more

‘None of us feel safe’: attacks on A&E nurses double in six years as waits rise

Attacks on A&E nurses have almost doubled over the last six years, with incidents often involving patients frustrated at waiting so long for care.

Nurses have been punched, spat at, pinned up against a wall, had a gun pointed at them and been threatened with having acid thrown at them, according to the Royal College of Nursing (RCN).

NHS figures show that the number of incidents of violence against nurses in A&E units in hospitals in England rose from 2,122 in 2019 to 4,054 in 2024 – a 91% increase.

“Behind these shocking figures lies an ugly truth,” said Prof Nicola Ranger, the general secretary of the RCN, which obtained the data using freedom of information laws.

“Dedicated and hard-working nursing staff face rising violent attacks because of systemic failures that are no fault of their own. Every incident is unacceptable,” she said.

Rachelle McCarthy, a charge nurse in the east Midlands, said that in her A&E department “even patients you would expect to be placid are becoming irate because of just how long they have to wait”.

Once she was punched “square in the face” by “a drunk, 6ft 2in bloke”, she said.

In another incident a patient in the waiting room of the A&E where the senior sister Sarah Tappy works in east London punched her in the head, knocking her unconscious. “The violence is awful. And it’s just constant. Nurses. Doctors. Receptionists. None of us feel safe,” she said.

A senior A&E nurse in England’s south-west said she had seen violence against staff in her wards many times, including a patient “pinning a nurse up against a wall” and another colleague being punched by a patient “in the groin and stomach”.

Read full story

Source: The Guardian, 12 August 2025

Read more

USA: Surgery becoming safer in hospitals

Between 2019 and 2024, the mortality risk for hospitalised surgical patients declined nearly 20%, according to an analysis from Vizient and the American Hospital Association. 

Several factors contributed to this improvement in surgical outcomes. Between the first quarter of 2019 and the fourth quarter of 2024, post-operative sepsis declined 9.2%, post-operative respiratory failure by 19% and post-operative hemorrhage by 22.3%. 

The findings come at a time when acuity is projected to continue rising for hospitalized surgery patients, according to Sg2, a Vizient company. 

Infections and falls also decreased between 2019 and 2024, according to the report, which draws from Vizient’s database of more than 1,300 hospitals. The analysis focuses on 713 general, acute care hospitals across the U.S.

Among hospitalised surgical patients, vascular catheter-associated infections fell 9.2%, catheter-associated urinary tract infections decreased 6.6% and falls declined 10.7%. 

“While hospitals are proud of these efforts, we know there is always more work to do to deliver the highest quality care possible,” Rick Pollack, AHA president and CEO, said in a statement.

Read full story

Source: Becker's Hospital Review, 6 August 2025

Read more

As my daughter died of ME, the state met in secret to blame me

In the final weeks of Maeve Boothby O’Neill’s life, her mother tried frantically to get her the palliative care that might make her death more comfortable. Maeve was in pain, too weak to chew, and dying of malnutrition from severe myalgic encephalomyelitis (ME).

Sarah Boothby had no idea that at the same time as she begged for help for her daughter, the people she was turning to were holding secret safeguarding meetings, discussing the possibility that Maeve’s condition was in fact caused or fabricated by her — and proposing Maeve’s forcible removal from her care.

Maeve was 27 when she died in October 2021 in the Exeter flat she shared with Boothby. She had discharged herself from hospital because, with no cure or viable treatment, she wanted to die at home.

Boothby and Maeve’s father, the Times journalist Sean O’Neill, knew from bitter experience that there was scant medical support available for ME. But they could not understand why it was so hard to get their daughter the help she needed for a more bearable death.

It was only when council documents were disclosed before Maeve’s inquest last year that they finally got answers.

Safeguarding records for the final year of Maeve’s life show social workers, nurses and a mental health assessor, instead of focusing on managing Maeve’s ME, were investigating concerns about Boothby. That year there were seven safeguarding meetings that neither Maeve, nor her parents, were invited to.

Boothby contacted The Sunday Times after an investigation last month found that hundreds of parents, mostly mothers, are being falsely accused of fabricating or inducing their child’s illness, and facing allegations of abuse when they seek medical care for them.

The ME Association says parents of children with ME or long Covid are “a sitting duck” for allegations of “fabricated or induced illness” (FII, of which FDIA is the most extreme example) because the condition is so poorly understood and it is challenging to get a diagnosis.

Read full story (paywalled)

Source: The Times, 10 August 2025

Read more

Scots urged to show Yellow Card to meds side effects

People in Scotland are being encouraged to take part in a national scheme tracking the side effects from taking prescribed medication.

Healthcare Improvement Scotland has made the plea after finding 57% of people surveyed across the country have experienced adverse effects from medicines.

The report, based on survey findings of more than 560 people across Scotland, found 84% of those who had experienced unintended effects from medicines had spoken to a healthcare professional, but only 10% reported it themselves to the national Yellow Card scheme.

It recommends raising awareness of the Yellow Card scheme – run by medicines regulator the Medicines and Healthcare products Regulatory Agency (MHRA) – to improve under-reporting of medicines’ side effects and help new safety issues be identified as early as possible.

The report also recommends NHS Scotland improve the way it uses data from the Yellow Card Scheme to take action to improve medicines safety.

Read full story

Source: Health and Care Scotland, 8 August 2025

Read more

‘Extra appointments’ celebrated by government deliver ‘modest impact’ on waiting lists

The “4.6 million extra NHS appointments” championed by the prime minister and health secretary have only had a “modest impact” on reducing waiting list clock stops, a vital part of cutting the NHS’s elective care backlog, according to new analysis shared exclusively with HSJ.

Last month, the government announced that “NHS staff have now delivered 4.6 million extra elective appointments since July – more than double the 2 million the government promised in its first year”.

Health and social care secretary Wes Streeting commented that NHS elective waiting lists had dropped by “more than 260,000 since we took office”. He added: “This is not a coincidence – it is because this government has delivered on the Plan for Change and put in the work to finally get our NHS moving in the right direction.”

However, analysis by The Health Foundation shows the extra activity has produced a much lower impact on waiting list clock stops than could have been expected based on the ratio between the two measures in the previous year.

The research concluded the “extra 4.6 million appointments” would have resulted in 1.2 million extra “clock stops” between July 2024 and April 2025, if the NHS had continued to convert average appointments to completed pathways at the rate it had done between July 2023 and April 2024.

But the analysis shows instead only around 340,000 additional pathways were completed between July 2024 and April 2025.

Read full story

Source: HSJ, 11 August 2025

Read more

Lucy Letby’s hospital slammed for A&E failings over ‘unsafe’ corridor care that left elderly patients delirious

Lucy Letby’s hospital trust has been slammed for a string of emergency care failings, including unsafe corridor care that led to elderly patients developing delirium.

The Countess of Chester Hosptial, where Lucy Letby worked and was convicted of murdering seven babies and attempting to murder seven others, was criticised by the Care Quality Commission (CQC) over delays in the care of sepsis patients, as well as elderly patients who were left for so long that they developed “corridor-induced delirium”.

The hospital was also criticised for having “visibly dirty equipment” and out-of-date medical devices, including some with damaged wires hanging out.

The watchdog has handed the trust a formal warning notice over the failures identified after the CQC’s inspection in February 2025. Concerns included:

  • Mental health patients being left with staff who were sleeping or on their phones.
  • Patients with fractured hips are forced to sit in wheelchairs when they should have had beds.
  • Inspectors found 59 incidents of delays to providing sepsis treatment, 44 of which were because the trust failed to take patients from ambulances quickly enough.
  • Evidence that “long stays on the corridor” and the deterioration of patients because of this was “normalised”.

Read full story 

Source: The Independent, 8 August 2025

Read more

Experts warn against DIY Botox-like injections available illegally online

People seeking cheap Botox-like injections have been warned by experts against doing it themselves due to the risk of “eyelid droops”, infection and even botulism.

There are growing concerns over the availability of medication called Innotox that is being sold illegally online in the UK. Unlike Botox, which comes as a powder that must be reconstituted for use in an injection, Innotox is a ready-to-use liquid – making it easier to self-administer.

Wes Streeting, the health secretary, announced plans this week to introduce legislation cracking down on England’s cosmetic “wild west”, where there is scant regulation of who can deliver treatments such as dermatological filler and Botox.

Experts say Innotox is not licensed for use in the UK, unlike some other liquid Botox-like injections, meaning its quality and safety has not been assessed.

Aenone Harper-Machin, a consultant plastic surgeon and spokesperson for the British Association of Plastic, Reconstructive and Aesthetic Surgeons (BAPRAS), said the online availability of Innotox was frightening and appalling, and she cautioned against DIY jabs.

“People could be giving themselves eyelid droops and all sorts of weird asymmetries by injecting it in the wrong place, too deeply, too superficially. You can inject it into your blood vessel and give yourself botulism,” she said.

Health officials have said 41 recent cases of botulism poisoning in England have been linked to unlicensed jabs.

Harper-Machin has had Botox-like injections but said she would not self-administer them. “I wouldn’t have it done by anybody other than a consultant plastic surgeon who has intimate knowledge of facial anatomy,” she said.

Read full story

Source: The Guardian, 10 August 2025

Read more

AI tools used by English councils downplay women’s health issues, study finds

Artificial intelligence tools used by more than half of England’s councils are downplaying women’s physical and mental health issues and risk creating gender bias in care decisions, research has found.

The study found that when using Google’s AI tool “Gemma” to generate and summarise the same case notes, language such as “disabled”, “unable” and “complex” appeared significantly more often in descriptions of men than women.

The study, by the London School of Economics and Political Science (LSE), also found that similar care needs in women were more likely to be omitted or described in less serious terms.

Dr Sam Rickman, the lead author of the report and a researcher in LSE’s Care Policy and Evaluation Centre, said AI could result in “unequal care provision for women”.

“We know these models are being used very widely and what’s concerning is that we found very meaningful differences between measures of bias in different models,” he said. “Google’s model, in particular, downplays women’s physical and mental health needs in comparison to men’s.

“And because the amount of care you get is determined on the basis of perceived need, this could result in women receiving less care if biased models are used in practice. But we don’t actually know which models are being used at the moment.”

AI tools are increasingly being used by local authorities to ease the workload of overstretched social workers, although there is little information about which specific AI models are being used, how frequently and what impact this has on decision-making.

Read full story

Source: The Guardian, 11 August 2025

Read more

Trump, pharma industry discuss boosting medicine spending abroad to cut US prices, sources say

The Trump administration has been talking to pharmaceutical companies about ways to raise prices of medicines in Europe and elsewhere in order to cut medication costs in the United States, according to a White House official and three pharmaceutical industry sources.

US officials told drug companies it would support their international negotiations with governments if they adopt "most favored nation" pricing under which US drug costs match the lower rates offered to other wealthy countries, the White House official said.

The US is currently negotiating bilateral trade deals and setting tariff rates on the sector.

The Trump administration has asked some companies for ideas on raising prices abroad, two of the sources said, describing multiple meetings over several months aimed at lowering US prices without triggering cuts to research and development spending pharmaceutical companies insist would result.

Read full article.

Source: Reuters, 7 August 2025

Read more
 

Over-the-counter health test results accessible via the NHS App

Patients are now able to view the results of at-home blood and DNA tests from MyHealthChecked on the NHS App, through an integration with Patients Know Best (PKB). 

PKB is a personal health record which integrates data sources from NHS and non-NHS health providers as well as devices and information from patients.

The integration with over-the-counter test provider MyHealthChecked, which went live on 25 July 2025, also allows patients to securely share their test results with healthcare professionals. 

The service is available for customers wherever PKB is live with the NHS App, which includes 22 integrated care systems in England, and Swansea Bay University Health Board in Wales.

Read full article.

Source: Digital Health, 8 August 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.