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Systemic issues identified within mental health services

A new report from the Health Services Safety Investigations Body (HSSIB) has shed light on significant systemic issues within mental health services, highlighting a persistent culture of fear and blame, and a lack of patient and family involvement, which obstruct effective learning from inpatient deaths.

The HSSIB report scrutinises how mental health providers learn from deaths occurring in inpatient units and within 30 days post-discharge. The investigation reveals multiple processes involved in learning from deaths, including the Learning from Deaths Framework, coroner's inquests, and investigations following patient safety events.

The report indicates that there are substantial challenges in maintaining safety, conducting effective investigations, and ensuring system-wide learning. It identifies that investigations and patient safety event analyses, although intended to promote transparency and learning, often suffer from variable quality. Local investigations frequently lack comprehensive information and fail to observe clinical work practices in real-time, hindering a complete understanding of care delivery.

A critical revelation of the investigation is the prevalent culture of blame within mental health services. Patients, families, and organisations often fear safety investigation processes, which are perceived as punitive rather than educational. The report underscores that patient safety investigations rarely account for the emotional distress experienced by those involved, leading to compounded harm.

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Source: National Health Executive, 30 January 2025

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Four US states consider new laws for people who have abortions to be punished as murderers

South Carolina, Oklahoma, North Dakota, and Indiana legislatures are considering bills that would classify abortion as homicide and therefore allow patients who have abortions to be charged with murder. Three of the states have the death penalty for murder.

All four states already have bans or very strict restrictions on abortion. South Carolina bans abortion after six weeks of pregnancy, North Dakota has a total ban on abortion that is currently in the courts, and Oklahoma and Indiana have complete bans already.

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Source: BMJ, 27 January 2025

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Bowel cancer prediction test for IBD patients 90% accurate

A new method for detecting bowel cancer is more than 90% accurate at predicting which higher-risk people will develop the disease, according to research.

About 500,000 people in the UK live with inflammatory bowel disease (IBD), including Crohn's and ulcerative colitis.

Currently, they are offered regular checks for pre-cancerous growths in their gut, which, if detected, indicate about a 30% chance of bowel cancer developing over 10 years.

But the UK research found DNA changes in those pre-cancerous cells, when analysed by an algorithm, were more than 90% accurate in predicting who would develop bowel cancer over the next five years.

Prof Trevor Graham, from the Institute of Cancer Research in London, said: "Most people with ulcerative colitis or Crohn's disease won't develop bowel cancer.

"But for those that have these conditions and are showing signs of pre-cancer in their colon, there are some tough decisions to make.

"Either they have it monitored regularly, in the hope that it doesn't become cancer, or they have their bowel removed to guarantee they don't get cancer in the future.

"Neither of these options are particularly pleasant.

"Our test and algorithm give people with IBD, and the doctors who care for them, the best possible information so that they can make the right decision about how to manage their cancer risk."

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Source: BBC News, 30 January 2025

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'Not at heart of NHS': Fears women's health hubs could be reduced in new targets

The NHS “doesn’t always have the needs of women at its heart”, the head of the service has admitted to MPs.

Amanda Pritchard, chief executive of NHS England, insisted that women’s health is a “priority” following criticism over plans to scrap a number of targets – including a pledge over women’s health.

Reports suggest that one current NHS pledge, for a women’s health hub to be established in each region, will not be renewed in the 2025-26 guidance, due to be published on Thursday.

The hubs are intended to provide a wide range of services under one roof, including pelvic health physiotherapy, mammograms, cervical smears, contraception, menopause support, and diagnosis and treatment for common gynaecological issues.

But The i Paper revealed last month that despite the promise to have at least one hub in every region by the end of 2024 – just 11 out of 42 NHS integrated care boards (ICBs) had set up dedicated women’s health hubs.

The remaining ones either relied on existing primary and secondary networks for women, or had a “one-stop shop” providing other services outside of just women’s health. Some areas had no women’s health hub at all.

The Royal College of Obstetricians and Gynaecologists (RCOG) has implored health leaders to reconsider the decision to ditch the pledge, saying that the hubs have had a “transformational impact” and scaling them back could lead to delays in essential services.

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Source: iNews, 29 January 2025

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Surge in Americans getting sterilisations given states’ abortion laws

For nearly two years, in the wake of the Supreme Court overturning Roe v. Wade, Alexander W. Pastuszak and his wife grappled with growing anxiety about the implications of an unplanned pregnancy.

As the parents of two children, with no desire to have a third, the Utah couple worried they might not be able to get access to an abortion if the unexpected occurred.

So in May, he underwent a vasectomy. Despite their state allowing abortion up to 18 weeks of gestation or later under certain circumstances, he worried that a national ban could be implemented.

“Are we going to fly to another country to have an abortion? I mean, that just seems ridiculous and unsafe,” said Pastuszak, a urologist at the University of Utah School of Medicine.

His decision reflects a growing trend across the country, with health experts predicting that more people will choose sterilization because of fears over restricted access to reproductive health care during a second Trump administration.

Research shows a significant increase in vasectomies and tubal ligations in the months just before and after the Supreme Court ruled in Dobbs v. Jackson Women’s Health Organization, the 2022 decision that ended a constitutional right to abortion after nearly half a century.

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Source: Washington Post, 27 January 2025

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EU acts to boost cybersecurity in hospitals

The European Commission has introduced an action plan to strengthen the cybersecurity of hospitals and healthcare providers across the European Union (EU). The initiative includes creating a pan-European Cybersecurity Support Centre, managed by the European Network and Information Security Agency, to address the rising number of cyber threats targeting healthcare institutions.

In 2023 alone, 309 significant incidents were reported in healthcare, more than in any other critical sector. 

“The healthcare sector faces the highest proportion of high-impact cybersecurity incidents,” Robin van Kessel, PhD, a Hoffmann fellow in health system financing and payment models at the London School of Economics, London, United Kingdom, and the World Economic Forum, told Medscape Medical News

This disproportionate impact reflects the fact that healthcare organisations store a large amount of sensitive patient data, including medical histories, diagnoses, and treatment information. Cyberattacks on healthcare systems can disrupt critical medical services, thus causing potentially severe consequences for patient care and safety. 

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Source: Medscape Medical News, 27 January 2025

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HMPV: Virus cases on the rise in UK as doctors issue ‘mask up’ warning

The rate of positive tests for a virus that swept hospitals in China is on the rise in the England, according to official figures.

Latest UK Health Security Agency data show one in 20 (5 per cent) of hospital swabs for respiratory infections in England came back positive for human metaphneumovirus (HMPV) in the week ending January 19.

It’s the highest recorded rate of the virus so far this winter season, and above the 4.18 per cent of cases recorded at the start of 2024 - but still well below the 10 per cent recorded in 2021.

UKHSA, which does not publish case numbers, said the level of HMPV in England is currently “medium” based on the almost 8,000 samples tested. Doctors have urged people with symptoms of a respiratory illness to wear a face mask when out in public.

The age group with the highest proportion of HMPV cases was those aged 80 and over, soaring to 7.3 per cent and well above pre-Christmas levels. Cases have also risen to about 7 per cent in children up to the age of five.

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Source: The Independent, 28 January 2025

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‘Complacent’ health chiefs in England lack drive to transform NHS, say MPs

Plans to radically reform the health service are at risk because senior leaders of both NHS England and the Department of Health and Social Care (DHSC) are “complacent” and lack dynamism, MPs have said.

In a report the public accounts committee (PAC) warns that officials in England have neither the ideas nor the drive to implement the health service transformation required by Keir Starmer and Wes Streeting.

The influential cross-party Commons committee did not identify individuals by name. But it reached its conclusions after questioning in November five top-level civil servants including Amanda Pritchard, NHS England’s chief executive, and Sir Chris Wormald, the DHSC’s then permanent secretary, who has since become the new cabinet secretary.

“The scale of government’s ambitions is great but senior officials do not seem to have ideas, or the drive, to match the level of change required, despite this being precisely the moment where such thinking is vital,” the PAC said in its report on the health service’s financial sustainability.

Their lack of energy and urgency risks wasting “a golden opportunity” to modernise how the NHS works and thus improve the country’s health, the MPs said.

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Source: The Guardian, 29 January 2025

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CQC examining service which ‘gave 14 people unnecessary cancer treatment’

Fourteen patients have raised concerns they may have received unnecessary chemotherapy with “debilitating side effects” at the same hospital, some for a decade or more, HSJ has been told.

The Care Quality Commission confirmed it was discussing concerns that University Hospitals Coventry and Warwickshire treated patients with temozolomide for far longer than deemed safe, and unnecessarily.

One man was treated with temozolomide for a brain tumour for more than 14 years, the BBC reported, despite NHS guidelines recommending treatment programmes of between six and 12 months.

The law firm Brabners, which is now representing five patients concerned they are in a similar situation, told HSJ it had spoken to others who had received the treatment for more than a decade. It had heard from 14 people as of yesterday, it said.

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Source: HSJ, 28 January 2025

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18 ICBs warned over deaths following care failures

Disjointed, delayed, and substandard care for people with both mental illness and additional needs are highlighted throughout reports sent to integrated care boards on the deaths of 24 people, HSJ has found.

A lack of inpatient beds, poor communication, staff shortages, and care fragmentation were common concerns raised with 18 ICBs in relation to 24 deaths linked to mental health care since the boards’ creation in July 2022, HSJ analysis reveals.

Of a total of 53 “prevention of future death reports” addressed to ICBs, 24 focused primarily on mental health – the most common theme of the reports.

Many of those who died were young, and many had additional needs, such as autism, ADHD or learning disabilities. They often endured long delays because of poorly-connected physical and mental health services. Some were refused multiple referrals because of the complexity of their needs.

Twenty-two of the 24 deaths were from suicide or self-harm.

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Source: HSJ, 28 January 2025

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WHO freezes recruitment and slashes travel to mitigate US withdrawal

The World Health Organization (WHO) is introducing immediate cost-cutting measures including a freeze on all but critical staff recruitment, according to an email from the Director-General to staff sent last week.

The body is also prioritising activities related to health priorities, “significantly reducing” travel, limiting procurement and suspending office upgrades.

All meetings will be virtual except in “exceptional cases” and only essential missions to provide technical support to countries will go ahead, according to the email.

This comes in response to the announcement by President Donald Trump that he is pulling the United States out of the global body.

“This announcement has made our financial situation more acute” and “created uncertainty for the WHO workforce,” said Tedros.

The shock decision by the US will undermine the reform process of the past five years. This will introduce even more precarity for staff at the global body as they battles to respond to a growing tide of health challenges, that are worsening with climate change.

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Source: Health Policy Watch, 24 January 2025

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Chronic fatigue syndrome: Outcry over Cochrane decision to abandon review of exercise therapy

A decision to cancel a planned update of a Cochrane systematic review of exercise therapy for chronic fatigue syndrome has met with anger from a group advising the review and the patient community.

The decision has reignited calls for the review, which includes studies only up to May 2014, to be withdrawn for being outdated and misleading.

The review recommends exercise therapy to treat myalgic encephalomyelitis/chronic fatigue syndrome (ME/CFS), concluding that this “probably has a positive effect on fatigue in adults compared to usual care or passive therapies.”

However, this treatment approach is controversial and has been criticised by patient groups who say that it can make symptoms worse. Guidelines from the National Institute for Health and Care Excellence, published in 2021, specifically advise against graded exercise therapy. Guidelines from the US Centers for Disease Control and Prevention also state that exercise therapy is not a cure for ME/CFS and that standard exercise recommendations for healthy people can be harmful for people with ME/CFS.

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Source: BMJ, 27 January 2025

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Woman's cancer diagnosis after wrong smear results

A woman has expressed her anger after being diagnosed with cervical cancer more than two years after her smear test result was incorrectly recorded as normal.

Amie Wood, 39, from Bewdley, Worcestershire, had a smear test that was reported as negative by the Royal Wolverhampton NHS Trust in October 2019.

Although negative, it showed high-risk human papillomavirus (HPV), a virus that can lead to cancer, the HPV persisted and she was subsequently diagnosed with cervical cancer in January 2022.

The NHS trust said it expressed its regret and apologised to Ms Wood.

Following her diagnosis, Ms Wood had a hysterectomy.

Ms Wood said she suffered increased anxiety about her health, and felt unable to return to her part-time second job as a personal trainer.

"To be diagnosed with cervical cancer and undergo a hysterectomy was heartbreaking enough, but then I found out that my smear results had been misreported and it could have all been avoided," she said.

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Source: BBC News, 28 January 2025

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Mental health ‘Care gaps, poor communication and a 26-day stay in A&E’ lay behind death

A coroner has ordered an integrated care board to fill gaps in its services and address mental health bed shortages following the death of a 29-year-old with autism and ADHD who spent 26 days in A&E.

Matthew “Matty” Sheldrick (they/them), who identified as non-binary, died from self-ligature outside Royal Sussex County Hospital after returning to A&E one month on from the 26-day stay. Matty had struggled to access community services for support with their mental health, autism, and ADHD.

Confusion about and delays to appointments during their time in hospital and the community contributed to a sense of hopelessness, according to Matty’s mother, Shelagh Sheldrick.

In two prevention of future death reports published last month, senior area coroner Penelope Schofield said Matty received “no meaningful therapeutic input” during their prolonged first stay in an A&E short-stay ward and that the environment “contributed to the deterioration of their mental health difficulties”.

In a report addressed to Sussex Integrated Care Board, Ms Schofield raised concerns over a lack of funding for private mental health beds for autism patients, and the fact that oversubscribed public providers “very often” rejected referrals for autism patients because of “additional risks”.

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Source: HSJ, 28 January 2025

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Wegovy maker Novo Nordisk rebuked by watchdog over failure to disclose payments to UK health groups

The pharmaceutical watchdog has reprimanded Wegovy maker Novo Nordisk for failing to correctly disclose dozens of payments to the UK health sector as it sought to boost sales of its slimming drugs.

The Danish drug giant – Europe’s most valuable listed company – systematically misreported, under-reported or did not disclose funding given over seven years to pharmacy firms, obesity charities, training providers, professional bodies and patient groups.

Even after admitting to errors and conducting an internal review, it failed to accurately report its spending. The company has now been formally reprimanded by the Prescription Medicines Code of Practice Authority (PMCPA), which said it had brought the industry into disrepute.

Finding 48 breaches of the industry code, it said serious compliance failings – committed while Novo Nordisk was already the subject of an audit after previous breaches – “raised questions about the culture of the company and demonstrated poor governance and a lack of care”.

It said that “by failing to publicly disclose payments, inaccurately reporting and misreporting payments to healthcare organisations and patient organisations over an extended period of time”, it “had brought discredit upon, and reduced confidence in, the pharmaceutical industry”.

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Source: The Guardian, 26 January 2025

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Inquest may reopen into girl who died on rogue surgeon’s table

A coroner wants to reopen an inquest into the death of a teenager who died during an operation by a disgraced NHS surgeon.

The Sunday Times exposed a report in 2022 that said the once-renowned spinal surgeon John Bradley Williamson’s “unacceptable and unjustifiable” actions contributed to the death of 17-year-old Catherine O’Connor at Salford Royal Hospital in February 2007.

Greater Manchester police has concluded an investigation and passed its findings to the Bolton coroner, Timothy Brennand, who will seek permission to reopen the inquest. The teenager’s family believe they have evidence showing Williamson misled the initial inquest.

The prime minister intervened last week to promise a meeting with ministers after MPs raised dozens of other cases of patient harm linked to the surgeon, which they say need investigating. 

More than a dozen staff at Salford Royal, once hailed as the safest hospital in England, have spoken out about what they described as Williamson’s bullying, toxic behaviour and the unsafe surgery that left many of his patients with severe complications.

A review of 130 patients treated by Williamson between 2009 and 2014 found 23 had screws misplaced in their spines; five lost excessive blood during surgery; more than 40 had problems with consent; and in 35 cases there was poor surgical practice.

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Source: The Times, 25 January 2025

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An embarrassing but predictable end to Scotland's National Care Service

The Scottish government is scrapping its plans to create a National Care Service.

It is an embarrassing but perhaps predictable end to years of ambitious talk about finally coming up with a solution to the social care crisis.

In a statement at Holyrood, the government tore up parts of the bill that would require major structural changes to the Scottish social care system.

The downfall of the plan wasn't money or lack of ambition necessarily. And there was cross-party agreement on what needed to be done. The problem was a frustrating lack of consensus on how to get there.

It is also the end of the process that has been costly too. More than £30m has already been spent on planning the policy cover the last three years.

In 2021, Ms Sturgeon branded the National Care Service the "most ambitious reform since devolution".

Now, the plan is in tatters, and it tells us a lot about how difficult social care reform is and what might lie in store for the Westminster government.

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Source: Sky News, 27 January 2025

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Wes Streeting accused of lack of transparency on puberty blockers trial just weeks before it starts

Wes Streeting has been accused of causing “distress and uncertainty to trans people” and failing to provide clear information on the puberty blockers trial, which is understood to be starting soon.

Puberty blockers were banned indefinitely in the UK for under-18s in December after the Cass Review found there was insufficient evidence to show they were safe. It recommended a clinical trial to determine the effectiveness and safety of the medication.

It is understood the Department for Health and Social Care (DHSC) expects the trial to begin within the next few weeks and conclude in 2028.

But NHS sources told The Independent they are not expecting to publish any details about the trial until February – just one month before it is set to begin – leaving young people wanting to access the medication guessing if they will be part of the trial.

Trans charities and campaign groups have so far received little to no information on who will be able to participate in the trial, how they will access it and when it will start, with Stonewall urging the government to “provide certainty to an extremely vulnerable group”.

Meanwhile, Tammy Hymas, head of communications and advocacy at charity Mermaids, told The Independent the “severe delays and complete absence of details” on the clinical trial has “left trans youth feeling abandoned”.

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Source: The Independent, 26 January 2025

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Sewage leaks and ops delayed - life at hospitals awaiting rebuild

The Princess Alexandra Hospital in Essex has been plagued by problems with its ageing buildings and equipment in recent years.

It has regular difficulties with floods and sewage leaks across its site, which dates back to the 1960s.

There have been reports of patients slipping on flooded floors, foul smells of faeces filling A&E and leaks on wards and in the operating theatre areas, posing a risk to patients and staff alike.

Along with broken equipment and other building-related problems, it leads to so-called "infrastructure" incidents occurring three times a week on average, according to official NHS data analysed by the Liberal Democrats.

Over the summer, two of the main operating theatres were out of action, disrupting care for patients needing hip and knee surgery.

"We were unable to get the ventilation parts. We were unable to get the light fittings," hospital chief operating officer Stephanie Lawton told the BBC.

"It took us several weeks to get those theatres repaired. The infrastructure is quite old now - it's very difficult to maintain."

Back in September 2019, there was delight at the hospital when it was announced at the Conservative party conference that a new hospital would replace the existing one. Hospital bosses were soon predicting the doors at the new site would open in 2024 as Boris Johnson promised England 40 new hospitals, including upgrades of existing sites, in his 2019 election manifesto.

But by 2023 the planned finish date for Princess Alexandra had slipped to 2030 - and this week it became one of 18 hospitals to be told there rebuilds would be delayed even further.

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Source: BBC News, 25 January 2025

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Increase regulation of online sale of weight-loss jabs, pharmacists say

Pharmacies are demanding tougher regulation of the online sale of weight-loss jabs amid a predicted new year’s boom in demand.

The National Pharmacy Association (NPA), who represent independent community pharmacies, urged the regulator to require greater consultation with patients before dispensing weight-loss jabs and other high-risk medication online.

Current rules, the NPA said, “leaves the door open for medicines to be supplied without appropriate patient consultation and access to patient records”.

Nick Kaye, chair of the NPA, said: “Obesity is one of the biggest challenges facing our country and pharmacies want to play their part in helping patients lose and maintain a healthy weight. Weight-loss injections can play an important role in efforts to tackle obesity when prescribed as part of a carefully managed treatment programme for patients who are most in need of support.

“However, we are concerned that the current regulations allow some patients to inappropriately access weight-loss injections without proper consultation or examination of historical medical records.”

The NPA urged regulators to require that pharmacies conduct a full two-way consultation with patients before dispensing “higher-risk” medication such as weight-loss jabs.

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Source: The Guardian, 27 January 2025

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Quarter of people in England had poor NHS care in past year, report says

A quarter of people in England experienced poor NHS care over the last year but fewer than one in 10 of them complained about it, a report by the patient watchdog has revealed.

When people did complain, more than half were not satisfied with either the process involved or the outcome, Healthwatch England said. Complaints take many months to resolve.

It found a widespread lack of public confidence in the health service’s handling of complaints, and “little evidence” that it was discharging its duty to use complaints to improve care.

Louise Ansari, the watchdog’s chief executive, accused the NHS of doing too little to take complaints more seriously and urged it to adopt “a culture of listening and learning” from them so that patients’ concerns would start to carry more weight.

The NHS has not responded properly to repeated concerns about the way it deals with complaints raised by official bodies and inquiries, and appears to be stuck in “a cycle of repeating the same mistakes”, the report said.

Ansari said: “We flagged failings with the NHS over a decade ago, following the patient safety scandal at Mid Staffordshire hospital. Ten years on, our research shows that the public still lack confidence in the NHS complaints system.”

The health service has not heeded its call for an overhaul and demonstrates persistent “serious failings in how NHS organisations listen and respond to patient feedback”, the watchdog said.

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Source: The Guardian, 27 January 2025

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Shock testimony of NHS nurse reveals harrowing reality of A&E today

When I had last set eyes on the man who had been brought in with a suspected heart condition, he was in a wheelchair wedged into an alcove normally used to store hospital equipment.

He was clearly seriously ill and should have been in a cubicle attached to a monitor – but then you could say the same for the dozens of others, crammed into the corridor outside my hospital’s frantically busy A&E department, the only physical space available left to us.

I say ‘space’ – there wasn’t any. Even the corridor was filled to capacity with patients on trolleys, in wheelchairs and waiting room chairs, along with other ‘walking wounded’ patients and relatives, all trying to navigate their way to and from the vending machine at the far end.

So crammed, that when the man in the wheelchair suffered a cardiac arrest it was impossible for the crash team to get to him to resuscitate him.

There was literally no room to reach him, less still to lie him on the floor and perform CPR.

That man died right there in his chair as his frantic wife screamed for help.

It was – and is – inhumane, but then I could use that word to describe a lot of what is unfolding in our emergency departments these days, and in which corridor nursing, which should really only be used in exceptional circumstances, has become a daily reality without which A&E departments couldn’t function at all.

This last week the sheer monstrous scale of the problem was laid bare in a report from the Royal College of Nursing, which featured the testimony of more than 5,000 nurses and exposed the daily horrors unfolding in emergency departments up and down the country.

It’s a picture I certainly recognise only too well after 25 years on the frontline of nursing in a busy Greater London hospital.

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Source: The Daily Mail, 24 January 2025

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A&E will be swamped by half of England’s population every year unless NHS reformed, warns top doctor

England’s top doctor has warned the equivalent of half the country’s population will be attending emergency departments every year within a decade unless more work is done to move healthcare out of hospitals.

NHS national medical director Professor Sir Stephen Powis said if the health system wants to avoid a situation of overcrowded A&Es by 2034 then it “must go for broke” by moving more care into communities.

A&Es in England faced the busiest year on record in 2024, with 27.42 million attendances across the year, 7.1 per cent higher than in 2023, according to NHS England.

In a speech at Liverpool Medical Institution on Wednesday evening, Professor Powis said caring for more patients outside of hospitals was key to reducing pressure on accident and emergency departments long term.

“Because we know that if A&E attendances increase at the same rate as they have over the past 10 years – NHS staff will need to manage six million more A&E attendances every year from 2034,” he is expected to say.

“That would mean the equivalent of almost half the population attend A&E at least once every year – that is simply not feasible for a 21st-century health system.

“If the NHS is to avoid a situation of overcrowded A&Es in 10 years’ time – we must go for broke in moving care from hospital to the community.”

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Source: The Independent, 22 January 2025

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Women paying up to £11,000 for a hysterectomy amid NHS delays

Women in Britain are paying up to £11,154 for a hysterectomy in a private hospital, amid huge delays for NHS gynaecological care, research reveals.

The cost of undergoing the procedure privately has soared by 19% from £7,385 in 2021 to £8,795 last year, at a time when NHS waiting lists have risen sharply.

The disclosure has prompted claims independent sector healthcare providers are taking advantage of long waits for health service treatment by increasing their prices.

The number of women waiting for care in an NHS hospital for conditions such as fibroids and endometriosis more than doubled from 360,400 when Covid struck in 2020 to 749,329, the Royal College of Obstetricians and Gynaecologists has shown.

In November 584,607 women in England were on an NHS gynaecological waiting list, with 20,809 of them being on the list for more than a year, which led to a growing number of women going private to beat delays.

Dr Ranee Thakar, the RCOG’s president, said untreated conditions “have a devastating impact on almost every aspect of [women’s] lives, including their physical and mental health, and their ability to work and socialise.

“Long NHS waiting times are certainly a factor in why some women choose to have their surgery privately,” she added.

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Source: The Guardian, 24 January 2025

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Leak reveals national plans to tackle A&E crisis

A raft of reforms NHS England and the government are proposing to address the crisis in urgent and emergency care can be revealed after a draft of the recovery plan was obtained by HSJ.

HSJ has seen an early “confidential working draft” of the national UEC improvement plan, which national officials are still working on, for publication in the coming weeks.

It is likely to develop, and HSJ understands officials are considering taking on board recommendations from cross-sector proposals published earlier this week. 

The draft seen by HSJ confirms a target for 2025-26 to increase four-hour A&E performance to 78% – the same target as in 2024-25 – despite health secretary Wes Streeting having originally pledged to return the NHS to meeting the 95 per cent standard by 2029. 

The new proposals are instead centred on 10 ‘action’ points for trusts and systems. They include aims to reduce 111 calls put through to 999 or A&E, and “avoidable” ambulance conveyances and handover delays; implement rapid triage at the ‘front door’ of A&Es; improve patient flow and access to mental health services; and deliver more care closer to home.

It also goes on also say that NHSE should separately “performance manage” A&Es on the length of waits for patients who attend with less serious conditions and therefore are not admitted.

As part of a “refreshed improvement offer,” an NHSE UEC improvement team will identify around 25 per cent of A&E sites which are “most in need” and work with them on “a clinical commitment to change whilst deploying multi-disciplinary improvement support” for a time limited period.

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Source: HSJ, 23 January 2025

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