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‘Difficult choices’: aid cuts threaten effort to reduce maternal deaths in Nigeria

At a UN-run antenatal clinic in a camp for people displaced by Boko Haram, the colours stand out like the bellies of the pregnant women. Abayas in neon green, dark brown and shades of yellow graze against the purple and white uniforms of nurses attending to them in the beige-orange halls of the maternal healthcare facility.

Within the clinic in Maiduguri in north-east Nigeria, midwives and nurses are handing out free emergency home delivery kits, “dignity kits” for sexual abuse survivors and reusable sanitary pads to curb exploitation of young girls who cannot afford them.

A dozen women sit on a mat in the corridor, awaiting the start of a session on reproductive health and doing their best to stay focused in the unwavering 42C heat. Among them is Yangana Mohammed, a smiling 32-year-old mother of seven who knits bama caps for a living.

“I like that the services are free,” she said, holding a yellow medical card while waiting to change her birth control implant. “I’m really glad for this clinic.”

Experts say more resources are needed to sustain these services in a region struggling with high maternal mortality, child marriage and female genital mutilation rates. UN global data for 2023, the most recent available, shows that Nigeria recorded 75,000 maternal deaths that year – nearly a third of the total worldwide.

Many of those cases are among north-east Nigeria’s estimated 45 million people. Ritgak Tilley-Gyado, an Abuja-based senior health specialist at the World Bank, said disparities were fuelled by inequities in health systems and socioeconomic and sociocultural status across the country.

“As a result, a woman in the north-east of the country is 10 times more likely to die from childbirth than her counterpart in the south-west … [with] a systems approach that tugs on the right levers, we can turn these abysmal numbers around and improve the wellbeing of mothers,” she said.

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Source: The Guardian, 21 May 2025

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Obese patients denied knee and hip replacements to slash NHS costs

Obese patients are being denied life-changing hip and knee replacements and left in pain in a bid to slash spiralling NHS costs, The Independent can reveal.

One-third of NHS areas in England and multiple health boards in Wales are blocking patient access based on their body mass index (BMI).

The move, deemed “unfair” and “discriminatory”, goes against guidance from the National Institute for Care Excellence (NICE), which states BMI shouldn’t be used to restrict patients’ access to joint replacement surgery.

Patients are instead being told they must lose weight before they are eligible but waiting lists for NHS weight loss programmes have ballooned, with some people waiting up to three years to be seen while other services have shut, unable to cope with demand.

The Royal College of Surgeons of England criticised the policy, saying that denying patients care could cost them their mobility and cause their health to deteriorate, while Tory peer and former health minister James Bethell called on the government to do more to tackle the obesity crisis and end the “misery for millions”.

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Source: The Independent, 31 May 2025

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'Deeply dangerous' assisted dying bill should be scrapped, says leading care consultant

A leading British palliative care consultant has described the assisted dying bill as "not fit for purpose" and is urging MPs to stop the bill from progressing any further.

Rejecting assurances from supporters of assisted dying who claim the proposed British version would be based on the scheme used in the American state of Oregon - widely regarded as the model with the most safeguards - Dr Amy Proffitt said "it's far from a safe system".

"The majority, 80% of the people that have assisted death have government insurance with Medicaid or Medicare suggesting that the vulnerable in society are not worth it," she said.

"Put that into our NHS and what does it say about us as a society... those with disability, those with learning disabilities, those with social deprivation?"

Dr Proffitt added: "I think it's deeply dangerous for the bill that has been proposed and it needs to be scrapped and we go back and look again."

She and other leading palliative care doctors have expressed concern about the erosion of end of life care if the bill passes. It is a fear expressed by Britain's hospice sector.

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Source: Sky News, 1 June 2025

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Pharmacists warn drug shortage affecting cancer patients

Pharmacists have warned that "one of the worst" examples of medicine shortages is affecting cancer patients.

Creon, a pancreatic enzyme replacement therapy (Pert), helps digestion and is required by patients with pancreatic cancer, cystic fibrosis, and chronic pancreatitis. It is thought more than 61,000 patients in the UK need the medicine.

Some patients are said to be "skipping meals" to ration their medication due to a shortage of it, according to the National Pharmacy Association (NPA).

A Department of Health and Social Care spokesperson said there were "European-wide supply issues" and it was "working closely with industry and the NHS" to mitigate the impact on patients.

Without the drug, patients lose weight and strength, which means their ability to cope with treatment such as chemotherapy is reduced.

Some experts have predicted shortages continuing until next year.

The Department of Health and Social Care has extended a serious shortage protocol for Creon which has already been in place for a year.

This indicates concern about shortages of a medicine and allows pharmacists to give patients an alternative - though they argue other drugs are also in short supply.

A spokesperson for the department said the "European-wide supply issues" were caused by manufacturing supply constraints.

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Source: BBC News, 2 June 2025

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Spending on agency staff across NHS in England drops by almost £1bn

Spending on agency staff across the NHS in England dropped by almost £1bn in the last financial year, ministers have said, after a pledge by Wes Streeting to cut the amount going to agencies by 30%.

According to the Department of Health and Social Care, the total spent by trusts on agency staff during 2024-25 was nearly £1bn lower than the previous year.

In a speech to the NHS Providers conference in November, Streeting, the health secretary, said a lack of permanent staff had seen gaps filled by more expensive agency-provided replacements totalling about £3bn a year.

Under proposals outlined at the time, but not yet enacted, Streeting suggested that NHS trusts could be completely banned from using agency staff for lower level jobs such as healthcare assistants and domestic support workers.

In addition to employing agency staff, which can mean paying a doctor thousand of pounds for a single shift, NHS trusts also routinely plug gaps by using what are known as “bank” staff – NHS employees who do extra shifts at their own workplace or one nearby, via an organisation usually run by the trust.

UK-wide figures reported by the Guardian in January 2024 showed that the combined spend of hospitals and GP surgeries for agency staff was an annual £4.6bn, with another £5.8bn used for bank shifts.

As part of the clampdown on agency spending, Streeting and James Mackey, the chief executive of the imminently abolished NHS England, have jointly written to all NHS providers and integrated care board executives to set out that each should target the 30% reduction, and that their progress will be monitored.

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Source: The Guardian, 2 June 2025

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Basic errors lay behind trust’s botched IT upgrade, leak reveals

A string of basic errors led to a teaching trust botching a pathology lab IT upgrade, causing major disruption to tests, according to an internal review seen by HSJ.

The problems with Leeds Teaching Hospitals Trust’s upgrade to the Clinisys WinPath system in December resulted in tens of thousands of blood tests being lost or delayed, with managers admitting patients were potentially put at risk.

An internal LTHT review of how “communication and escalation” problems contributed to the disruption, including:

  • Training delivered very late – even on the day of roll out – or not at all.
  • No end-to-end testing of the system took place prior to roll out.
  • There was no engagement with primary care to understand how the update could affect their workflows.
  • Ineffective communication channels for escalation of problems.
  • Lessons from previous NHS WinPath roll outs were not learned.

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Source: HSJ, 30 May 2025

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‘Revolutionary’ DNA blood test to offer thousands in England tailored cancer care

Thousands of cancer patients in England are to benefit from a DNA blood test that saves lives by fast-tracking them on to personalised treatments.

In a world-first, the NHS will offer patients with lung and breast cancer – two of the most common forms of the disease – a liquid biopsy that detects tiny fragments of tumour DNA.

Rapid results from the groundbreaking test mean patients can immediately be offered drugs and treatments specifically tailored to the genetic profile of their disease, significantly increasing their survival chances and paving the way for a new era of precision medicine.

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Source: The Guardian, 29 May 2025

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‘Urgent’ safety issues in mental health hospitals, review concludes

Mental health patients and nursing staff are being failed by a system “buckling under the weight of demand and decades of underinvestment”, nursing leaders have warned.

Their comments came in response to the publication of the Health Services Safety Investigations Body (HSSIB)'s final report in its series of investigations focusing on mental health inpatient services in England.

The report warned that staffing and resource constraints in inpatient and community mental health settings were impacting the ability to provide safe and therapeutic care to patients.

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Source: Nursing Times, 29 May 2025

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Doctors ‘should trust’ parents’ gut instincts about their children

Doctors trust a parent’s gut instinct that their child is becoming severely ill, research has shown, finding that it is a better indicator of health than medical tests.

The study analysed data from almost 190,000 A&E visits by children in Melbourne, Australia, where the parents were routinely asked: “Are you worried your child is getting worse?”

Parents’ intuition was “significantly” linked to the likelihood of admission to an intensive care unit (ICU), with children four times more likely to need ICU care if their parents had voiced concerns.

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Source: The Times, 29 May 2025

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External reviews ordered over trust’s baby death rates

Two external reviews are being commissioned into maternity and neonatal care at the trust with the highest perinatal mortality rates.

Leeds Teaching Hospitals Trust has claimed its extended perinatal mortality rate – which measures stillbirths and neonatal deaths – is within the expected range, considering it takes many high-risk pregnancies, including some where babies are not expected to survive, as a specialist centre.

However, a report to its board meeting today reveals it is commissioning an external review of the issue. The review would examine mortality data.

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Source: Health Service Journal, 29 May 2025 

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HSE tenders for €50m national electronic prescription service to reduce medication errors

The Irish Health Service Executive (HSE) is set to spend up to €50m on a new national electronic prescription service as it seeks to modernise as part of Ireland’s “broader digital health transformation”.

It has gone out to tender for the provision of this technology which it said will be rolled out in both public and private settings across the country’s healthcare system.

“Ireland’s healthcare system currently lags behind other European countries in its adoption of digital technologies,” it said.

“Its prescribing and dispensing processes are fragmented, with either Healthmail (secure email) or paper-based prescriptions being used. Healthcare providers often lack timely access to a patient’s complete medication history, leading to errors, communication gaps, and inefficiencies. Patients also have limited access to their medication information.” 

The current “healthmail” system has several limitations, according to the HSE, such as community pharmacy staff needing to locate and open patient files on the dispensing system and then transcribing details from prescriptions when they’re dispensing it.

The HSE said the new prescription service will be secure, efficient and a fully integrated digital service to transmit and store electronic prescriptions and dispensations for patients.

It will also integrate with existing and future health platforms and allow prescribers to generate prescriptions for patients electronically.

“It will enable accurate, timely access to medication information, which will enhance clinical decision-making, reduce medication errors, streamline clinical workflows, empower patients and improve overall patient care,” it said.

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Source: Irish Examiner, 25 May 2025

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RFK Jr threatens ban on federal scientists publishing in top journals

The US health secretary Robert F Kennedy Jr has threatened to ban government scientists from publishing in the world’s leading medical journals, which he branded “corrupt”, and to instead create alternative publications run by the state.

Kennedy outlined plans to launch government-run journals that would become “the preeminent journals” because National Institutes of Health (NIH) funding would anoint researchers “as a good, legitimate scientist”.

The three publications Kennedy targeted are among the most influential medical journals globally, established in the 19th century and now central to disseminating peer-reviewed medical research worldwide. The Lancet and Jama each report more than 30m annual website visits, while the New England Journal of Medicine claims more than 1 million weekly readers.

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Source: The Guardian, 28 May 2025

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Hospital doctor admits professional misconduct over patient’s death after dispute with nurse about dislodged breathing tube

A hospital doctor has admitted professional misconduct over an incident in which a patient with meningitis suffered a fatal lack of oxygen to the brain following a dispute with nursing staff over whether a breathing tube had become dislodged.

Ilankathir Sathivel appeared before a medical inquiry to face a series of allegations over his treatment of a patient in February 2019 while working as a registrar anaesthetist at Connolly Hospital Blanchardstown in Dublin.

The hearing before the Medical Council’s fitness-to-practise committee was told Dr Sathivel was making a number of admissions in relation to the care he provided to the 59-year-old male, identified only as Patient A, who had been admitted to the hospital’s intensive care unit after being diagnosed with bacterial meningitis.

The committee was informed that Dr Sathivel accepted that his failure to have regard for the stated view of a clinical nurse manager, Rosanne Kenny, that Patient’s A endotracheal tube had become dislodged about 3.58am on February 24, 2019 constituted professional misconduct.

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Source: The Irish Independent, 29 May 2025

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Health secretary urges no strikes as ballot of UK junior doctors begins

The Secretary of State for Health and Social Care, Wes Streeting MP, has urged doctors to vote against industrial action as the British Medical Association (BMA) ballots resident doctors, formerly known as junior doctors, for strike action that could last for six months.

Resident doctors say their pay has declined by 23% in real terms since 2008. If they choose to go on strike, walkouts could begin in July and potentially last until January 2026.

The government accepted salary recommendations from pay review bodies earlier this month, resulting in an average 5.4% rise for resident doctors.

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Source: The Guardian, 29 May 2025

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USA: Physician appointment wait times climb

A new AMN Healthcare survey published 27 May found it now takes an average of 31 days to schedule a physician appointment in 15 of the largest US metropolitan areas — up 19% from 2022 and 48% from 2004.

AMN Healthcare conducted the survey of 1,391 physician offices in January and February.   In 2022, the last year the survey was conducted, it took 26 days. In 2004, the first year the survey was conducted, it took 21 days.

The survey, which focused on six medical specialties, gathered data from offices across the Atlanta, Boston, Dallas, Denver, Detroit, Houston, Los Angeles, Miami, Minneapolis, New York City, Philadelphia, Portland, Ore., San Diego, Seattle and Washington, D.C., areas. 

It highlights ongoing challenges related to scheduling physician appointments.

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Source: Becker's Clinical Leadership, 27 May 2025

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Wes Streeting reviews teen hormone use amid safety concerns

Wes Streeting is considering banning cross-sex hormones after two gender dysphoria experts warned there were severe health risks associated with prescribing the drugs to children.

The health secretary began “actively reviewing” whether the medication should continue to be prescribed to children under 18 after new evidence was presented from leading Finnish and Swedish clinicians, the New Statesman has revealed.

Cross-sex hormones are masculinising and feminising hormones that bring about largely irreversible changes, such as causing females to develop deeper voices and initiating breast growth in males, when prescribed to patients who identify as the opposite sex.

Last week it was disclosed in a High Court case that the government was reviewing the “next steps”, including potentially banning the prescription of the drugs to young people — similar to the ban on puberty blockers last year.

The disclosure came on Wednesday during an attempt to bring a judicial review, which was ultimately rejected by the court, against Streeting’s failure to ban cross-sex hormones for children at the same time that he banned puberty blockers.

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Source: The Times, 27 May 2025

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NHS cannula method rolled out after city success

An ultrasound service which means fewer patients need surgery has been rolled out to eight NHS units after its success in Bristol.

NHS Blood and Transplant (NHSBT) said its unit in the Bristol Haematology and Oncology Centre used ultrasound-guided cannulation 177 times for patients or donors in an eight-month period.

A nurse uses an ultrasound machine to find a vein which cannot normally be found, it said. The procedure is used for people with illnesses including blood cancers and sickle cell disease.

Medics added it helped avoid "multiple attempts at cannulation", the need to go into theatre for central line insertions and removals and reduced patients' time in hospital.

The NHSBT said since the training began at its Bristol Therapeutic Apheresis Services (TAS) unit two years ago, it is thought more than 200 central line procedures had been avoided.

And the method has now been rolled out to eight other TAS units in England.

"Bristol is one of our busiest units and yet had the lowest rate of central line insertions thanks to this method," said Teresa Baines, Head of TAS at NHSBT.

"A lot of our patients come to us for regular treatments and so to be able to avoid multiple attempts at cannulation or being taken to surgery for line insertion (and later removal) on every visit, makes a huge difference to the quality of their care."

The NHSBT said the procedure could save patients up to half-a-day in hospital and also saves the NHS money.

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Source: BBC News, 28 May 2025

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Streeting apologises to families for six-month delay on maternity plan

Wes Streeting has apologised to families harmed by poor maternity care for taking six months to get back to them, and claimed he is pressing NHS England for a “more comprehensive and stronger set of actions” to improve safety.

The health and social care secretary had previously met with a group of campaigners for improved standards in December. But in a letter to them this week he admitted: “It has taken far longer than anticipated to come back to you with concrete plans for the actions we will take….I also realise that the lack of any update may have inadvertently implied that it was not a priority for me. This had never been my intention.”

The letter, seen by HSJ, added: ”I was keen that they were sufficiently ambitious to reflect the scale of the challenge with maternity and neonatal care… I have asked NHS England to continue working up a more comprehensive and stronger set of actions that will deliver the change we need – and subject to your views would like to ask them to work directly with yourselves.”

The delay in contact since December has caused some disquiet among families affected by recent maternity scandals, who felt they had been promised swifter action. Some groups favour a public inquiry into maternity nationally – which Mr Streeting is thought unlikely to offer – while other families hope for a “maternity czar” to drive forward change. 

In his letter this week, the MP said “on behalf of the Department, I offer my sincere apologies” for the delay in his response and action, and asked to meet the families again to discuss his plans, which include a set of immediate actions as well as longer-term plans to tackle entrenched issues.

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Source: HSJ, 28 May 2025

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'I feel forgotten after 100 weeks on urgent surgery list'

Tracey Meechan's pain from an ovarian cyst is so severe she can't bend over - she relies on her children to help her put her shoes and socks on.

Every day the 41-year-old wakes up and wonders if any new symptoms are going to appear.

She has been on an "urgent" NHS waiting list for surgery for 100 weeks and now feels "forgotten".

As the latest NHS Scotland waiting times data is due to be published, Mrs Meechan told BBC Scotland News that the wait for treatment has affected every part of her life.

She said: "I can't live my life to the fullest. I can't do the activities I want to do with my kids. I can't do the job that I love.

"I was signed off work at the end of January as a home carer because of the pain and the physicality of my job - I can't do it.

"My mental health has declined. This has been years and the symptoms have worsened. It's impacted my life, my personal life and my family."

Before the pandemic it was rare for anybody to face a wait of a whole year to start NHS treatment, but that is not the case now.

Waiting always has consequences – more frequent visits to the GP to manage pain, struggles to work or stay healthy in other aspects of life.

The government says tackling waits is a priority and has set a target to create 150,000 additional appointments this year.

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Source: BBC News, 27 May 2025

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MS patient’s life ‘crumbling’ after being switched to cheaper drug under NHS cost-cutting drive

A woman with multiple sclerosis (MS) says she has been left with debilitating symptoms after the NHS switched her to a cheaper drug.

Julie Cowdrill is among scores of MS patients who say they have suffered a regression in their condition after being switched from a drug called Tysabri to one called Tyruko, with complaints that a “cost-cutting exercise” is coming at the expense of their health.

NHS England is hoping to save £1bn over the next five years by switching to biosimilar drugs – medicines that have been shown not to be clinically different from the original drug, but are made far more cheaply.

However, in Ms Cowdrill’s case, she has been left suffering from headaches and extreme fatigue, and has experienced worsenening mobility since she started taking the drug in December 2024.

“Myself and many others have said that it feels like we’ve regressed 10 or 15 years after all the work we’ve done to get better. It’s like the rug has been pulled from under you – it’s dreadful,” she told The Independent.

The Medicines and Healthcare products Regulatory Agency (MHRA) said it is “aware” that some patients have experienced side effects, but that a rigorous assessment has “demonstrated no clinically meaningful differences” between the drugs.

A spokesperson for the MS Trust said it had been contacted by patients who have noticed “significant symptom changes” after switching from Tysabri to Tyruko (both of which are natalizumab products).

“It is vital that we fully understand the experiences of people with MS when switching from one natalizumab product to another. We are talking to all stakeholders, including people with MS, to ensure that this data is collected and shared transparently with the MS community and the healthcare teams responsible for prescribing them,” the spokesperson said.

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Source: The Independent, 26 May 2025

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Progress on patient safety across health systems around the world

Member States recognised the significant progress that has been made in implementing the resolution WHA72.6 on global action on patient safety and the Global Patient Safety Action Plan 2021–2030 during a progress report session at WHA 78 on 23 May 2025.  

The World Health Organization (WHO) highlighted improvements made in 108 countries listed in the Global Patient Safety Report 2024, in advancing targeted policies, improving patient safety processes, strengthening incident reporting and learning systems, engaging patients, and building health workforce competencies to reduce avoidable harm in health care. To support countries, WHO has provided technical support and capacity building to Member States, continues to develop essential technical resources, and has actively engaged in establishing and leading strategic partnerships and global alliances. 

Despite improvements, important gaps remain. Only one-third of countries have specific national programmes or action plans in place, prompting WHO to initiate dialogue with 59 countries to address these issues. Progress has also been slow, with only 25% of countries fostering a safety culture and 23% adopting a human factors approach. WHO is developing guidance to address these challenges. 

WHO continues to support the Global Patient Safety Challenge: Medication Without Harm, with 74% of countries implementing the Challenge. Efforts to integrate patient safety into healthcare professional education and training remain limited, with only 20% of countries incorporating it into curricula. WHO is developing the WHO Academy Patient Safety Essentials course and updating the Patient Safety Curriculum Guide. 

Progress on patient and family engagement has been varied, with 80% of countries ensuring access to medical records but only 13% appointing patient representatives to hospital boards. WHO also supports the Global Patient Safety Network and the Global Patient Safety Collaborative to advance the patient safety agenda. 

To support World Patient Safety Day, observed annually on 17 September, WHO collaborates with Member States and stakeholders to develop global campaigns, technical resources, and flagship events. This year’s campaign theme is: Safe care for every newborn and every child.

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Source: WHO, 23 May 2025  

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Mental health A&E centres to open across England

Specialist mental health crisis centres will be opened across England over the next decade in an attempt to reduce crowding in accident and emergency (A&E) departments, the NHS has confirmed.

Ten hospital trusts have been piloting new assessment centres to deal with people experiencing a mental health crisis.

The aim is to get these patients into appropriate care in a calm environment, avoiding long waits in A&E.

NHS England said the new units would reduce overcrowding in hospitals and relieve pressure on emergency services, including the police.

But Andy Bell, the CEO of the Centre for Mental Health, an independent charity, said any new provision needed to be properly funded.

The scheme is expected to be expanded nationally to "dozens of locations", the government said, as part of its 10-year NHS plan.

These clinics will be open to walk-in patients as well as those referred by GPs and police, with specialist staff present to treat people in acute mental distress.

Speaking to the Times newspaper, NHS England chief Sir Jim Mackey hailed the "pioneering new model of care", external, where people can "get the right support in the right setting".

"As well as relieving pressure on our busy A&Es, mental health crisis assessment centres can speed up access to appropriate care, offering people the help they need much sooner so they can stay out of hospital."

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Source: BBC News, 24 May 2025

 
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Warning over unlicensed weight-loss jabs after woman left in intensive care

A woman was left fighting for her life after using a so-called “weight loss jab” sourced from a salon with police making three arrests.

The woman suffered internal injuries earlier after using an injection earlier this month. She has since been discharged. Two other people also become unwell.

North Yorkshire Police has launched an investigation into the supply of the injections as they arrested three women from the Selby area.

Medical professionals in North Yorkshire and the Medicines and Healthcare Products Regulatory Agency (MHRA) issued a warning against using weight loss medicines bought from private clinics or online.

They warned that buying products from unregulated suppliers “significantly increases the risk of getting a product which is either falsified or not licensed for use in the UK and can pose a direct danger to health”.

NHS Humber and North Yorkshire Integrated Care Board (ICB) Chief Pharmacy Officer, Laura Angus, said: “There has been a lot of attention in the media and on social media about these so-called ‘skinny jabs’, but as with any medicines bought outside of legitimate supply chains, the contents may not match the ingredients on the label.

“If you use such products you could be putting your health at serious risk.

“If you are thinking of buying a weight-loss medicine, please talk to a healthcare professional first. The only way to guarantee you receive a genuine weight-loss medicine is to obtain it from a legitimate pharmacy – including those trading online – using a prescription issued by a healthcare professional.”

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Source: The Independent, 25 May 2025

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Northern Ireland: New ED consultants will strengthen under pressure workforce, says minister

The health minister has said the recruitment of up to 26 emergency medicine consultants will help stabilise and strengthen the healthcare workforce in Northern Ireland.

The Department of Health said some of the consultants are already in post, with the others set to begin in their roles across all five health trusts by the end of the year.

It said funding for the new posts comes from reducing spending on locum doctors in emergency departments and that it comes as part of work to find roles for newly-qualified consultants in the health system.

Mike Nesbitt said everyone was "acutely aware of the very significant pressures" on emergency departments.

"Both staff and patients want us to do all we can to alleviate those pressures and that's been a central focus for my department and trusts in recent months."

Prof Lourda Geoghegan, deputy chief medical officer, said she was "very encouraged" by early reports on the impact of the new consultants, who had not only helped reduce locum spending but also increased the "presence of senior decision-making in emergency departments".

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Source: BBC News, 27 May 2025

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Plans for NHS staff to restrain those in mental health crisis ‘dangerous’, medics say

Plans for NHS staff to restrain and detain people experiencing a mental health crisis, instead of the police doing so, are “dangerous”, doctors, nurses and psychiatrists have warned.

The former prime minister Theresa May has proposed legislation in England and Wales that would change the long-established practice for dealing with people who may pose a risk to themselves or others because their mental health has deteriorated sharply.

But a coalition of eight medical groups, ambulance bosses and social work leaders said the switch would put mental health staff at risk and damage their relationship with vulnerable patients.

The row has echoes of the controversy stirred by the Metropolitan police’s decision in 2023 to stop responding to 999 calls involving mental ill health unless they involved a threat to life. The force said the change meant officers were attending crimes such as robberies faster, but mental health groups said they feared it could result in deaths.

May and two ex-health ministers, Syed Kamall and Frederick Curzon, have tabled amendments to the mental health bill going through parliament which, if passed, would lead to mental health nurses, psychiatrists or other doctors being called out to restrain and detain someone under the Mental Health Act. Those professionals would each become an “authorised person” who is allowed to detain someone under the act.

But in a joint statement on Monday the eight groups said the risks posed by someone in a mental health crisis meant police officers must continue to always attend. The groups include the Royal College of Psychiatrists, the Royal College of Nursing and the British Medical Association.

The groups said: “Removing police involvement entirely has hugely dangerous implications, as entering someone’s home without permission is fraught with huge risks and is only currently done with the assistance of police intelligence. Without this, professionals may be entering homes without police help and therefore lacking crucial intelligence that could ensure their safety.”

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Source: The Guardian, 26 May 2025

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