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Found 421 results
  1. Event
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    This is the third in a series of online lectures organised by the International Shared Decision Making Society (ISDM). This lecture will be hosted by Kristen Pecanac, UW-Madison School of Nursing. Join the webinar
  2. Event
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    This face-to-face event by The Royal College of Emergency Medicine will look at research around burnout and other psychological impacts of working in the emergency department. It will feature talks from clinicians promoting staff wellbeing and explore opportunities to work with the Sustainable Working Practice Committee. View the event programme Book this event. Reduced fees are available for RCEM members and student members LMIC clinicians and students.
  3. Event
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    What is next for urgent and emergency care across the country? With the COVID-19 pandemic transforming service delivery and reshaping what was once thought possible, the next challenge is to consider the state of urgent and emergency care services as another difficult winter approaches. Despite moves away from hospital-based care towards alternative solutions, urgent and emergency care is still under great pressure. Join this King's Fund event to hear about the latest debates and solutions to a very challenging issue: trying to ease the pressure on urgent and emergency care delivery. You will hear evidence-based examples from areas that are trying to re-imagine A&E departments and other services that provide and support urgent treatments, so patients get the right care in the right place. You will hear from international speakers, national leaders and a host of experts on a range of questions. The transition to 111: has it really happened, and has it yielded the anticipated results? What does the new integrated care systems structure have in store for urgent and emergency care? How should we shape targets and measure what works in urgent and emergency care? How can we support highly trained staff and avoid burn-out? Register
  4. Event
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    Many clinicians are involved in the complex care of the trauma patient from the pre-hospital arena through the Emergency Department and often into theatre and critical care. Interventions at all these stages could reduce Nociception and pain in order to facilitate recovery and rehabilitation for survivors. In this two-part Royal Society of Medicine (RSM) webinar series, hear about innovative approaches that cover the entire patient journey rather than only focusing on a single specialty. This thought provoking webinar is an opportunity for 'traumatogist' as well as the generalist to learn how to limit the long-term burden of painful trauma and its early treatment. Register
  5. Event
    A Westminster Health Forum policy conference with: Dr Clifford Mann, National Clinical Director, Urgent and Emergency Care, NHS England and NHS Improvement Dr Katherine Henderson, President, Royal College of Emergency Medicine Jessica Morris, Nuffield Trust; Dr Nick Scriven, The Society of Acute Medicine; Sandie Smith, Healthwatch Cambridgeshire and Peterborough; and Deborah Thompson, NHS Acute Frailty and Ambulatory Emergency Care Networks and NHS Elect Delegates will discuss key developments and challenges in the context of service changes in response to the COVID-19 pandemic, and the ongoing implementation of the NHS Long Term Plan. Register
  6. Content Article
    Report from the Association of Ambulance Chief Executives on national ambulance data.
  7. Content Article
    Over the past year, delays in transferring patients from an ambulance to a hospital have risen exponentially. In April 2022 there were over 41,000 delays of over 60 minutes, up over a staggering 450 per cent in 12 months. This equates to 71,000 hours lost, with a significant risk of harm to patients, even though the proportion being taken to hospital by ambulance has fallen thanks to successful initiatives such as “hear and treat” and “see and treat”. These delays mean that, too often, ambulance crews are not able to respond to 999 calls from critically ill patients. Instead they are being held in “stacks” of hundreds each day – as ambulance control room teams strive to prioritise overstretched resources. The current reality is that crews are often waiting with patients in hospital corridors or outside, hearing urgent calls to which they are unable to respond. In addition to the direct impact on patients, this is incredibly demoralising, even traumatising, for many staff involved. So why is this happening? In an article for the Independent, Daren Mochrie, chair of AACE – the Association of Ambulance Chief Executives, and Saffron Cordrey, interim chief executive at NHS Provider, discusses what is happening in the NHS.
  8. Content Article
    Emergency Department (ED) patient waiting times provide an important barometer for the wider pressures experienced in the NHS. There are currently alarming levels of crowding in our EDs, indicating that the health service is unable to meet the needs of patients with the current level of resource and capacity. In March 2022, for the first time in the history of the metric, the numbers of patients waiting 12-hours or more from decision to admit (DTA) exceeded 20,000. However the Royal College of Emergency Medicine (RCEM) argue that this number represents the tip of iceberg, as far greater numbers of patients experience extreme waits of 12 hours or more from their time of arrival. To investigate this issue further, RCEM carried out a Freedom of Information (FOI) request examining the extent of very long stays in EDs, with a particular focus on the numbers of patients waiting 12 hours or more from their time of arrival. They found that the current 12-hour data is a gross underrepresentation of the reality of patient waits, as it fails to capture the vast majority of patients who have no choice but to spend extended lengths of time in EDs. It additionally conceals the patients who are discharged home after very long stays. 
  9. Content Article
    Dr Gordon Hay, service director of A&E/urgent care services at Moorfields Eye Hospital discusses with Digital Health the challenge to minimising hospital visits during the pandemic and how Moorfields Eye Hospital utilised a video conference platform to implement a fully functional virtual A&E service, providing an effective hybrid care delivery model for the future.
  10. Content Article
    Alexander James Davidson was aged 17 years and 6 months when he died at the Queens Medical Centre on 26 February 2018. Alex was previously fit and well before suddenly taking ill with abdominal pain on 17 January 2018. Between that date and his admission to the Queens Medical Centre on 8 February 2018, Alex made contact with his GP on three occasions, had four telephone triage assessments undertaken by the NHS 111 service and two admissions to his local Accident & Emergency Department at the Kingsmill Hospital. Alex’s symptoms of sudden onset acute abdominal pain, tachycardia, and vomiting and diarrhoea were attributed either to stress or to a bout of gastroenteritis. At no stage prior to 8 February 2018 was gallstones or pancreatitis considered as a differential diagnosis. When Alex was eventually admitted to the Queens Medical Centre Emergency Department on 8 February 2018, he was found to be septic as a result of an infected and necrotic pancreatic pseudocyst, which had evolved as a complication of gallstone pancreatitis, a rare condition in someone of Alex’s age. Despite medical intervention, Alex did not survive. The inquest explored the medical treatment and intervention that Alex received in the six weeks prior to his death. The medical evidence concluded that the pancreatic pseudocyst had likely formed by the time Alex began vomiting on 18 January 2018, and from that point onwards, it was unlikely he would survive even with treatment on account of the high mortality rate associated with this condition
  11. Content Article
    This report by the National Confidential Enquiry into Patient Outcome and Death (NCEPOD) examines the quality of care provided to patients aged 16 years and over who were admitted to hospital following an out-of-hospital cardiac arrest (OHCA). The report is based on the findings of a study that looked at the clinical care delivered to patients from the time of an OHCA to discharge from hospital or death. The review of the clinical pathway included the community and emergency service response, hospital admission and inpatient care (in particular cardiac and critical care services). Data were also collected to assess organisational aspects of care within acute hospitals.
  12. Content Article
    Are you applying Safety-II principles to improve safety in maternity, A&E, ICU or anaesthetics? If so, Dr Ruth Baxter would love to interview you!
  13. Content Article
    The pandemic has had an enormous impact on health and care services in the UK. In this article, Nuffield Trust fellows Jessica Morris and Sarah Reed take a closer look at access and waiting times before and after the start of the Covid-19 pandemic. They highlight that before the pandemic, pressure on the system was already reducing access to NHS services and making waiting times longer. Covid-19 has made the situation significantly worse due to the need for heightened infection control practices, rising levels of staff sickness and burnout, the cancellation of routine care and redirection of staff. Enabling services to recover will be challenging given these ongoing pressures and real-term budget cuts for the NHS this year. The article examines the impact of the pandemic on waiting times relating to: General practice Elective (planned) care Diagnostic testing Cancer care A&E Ambulance
  14. Content Article
    This report by The Tony Blair Institute for Global Change sets out an action plan to save the NHS this winter. It highlights the pressures the health service faces, worsened by the Covid-19 pandemic, including a resurgent flu epidemic, the effect of the cost-of-living crisis, the unprecedented elective-care backlog and a depleted and exhausted workforce. The authors call for the Government to immediately: focus leadership minimise demand on the service improve patient flow and efficiency maximise capacity.
  15. Content Article
    This article in The Guardian aims to explain the major pressures the NHS will face in Autumn 2022. It identifies and explores the following threats: Covid Influenza Cost of living crisis Workforce shortages Pay
  16. Content Article
    The aim of this study from H R Guly was to describe the injuries misdiagnosed as a sprain of the wrist and to determine the approximate incidence of misdiagnosis in patients diagnosed as having a sprain of the wrist. In total 57 injuries initially diagnosed as a sprained wrist had a different diagnosis (1.76% of all diagnoses of sprained wrists). This is an underestimate of the true incidence of diagnostic error. Forty two per cent of the misdiagnoses were of greenstick or torus fractures of the distal radius. Guly concluded that training for junior doctors in A&E departments should be improved—especially training in radiological interpretation. Other methods of preventing diagnostic errors by misreading of radiographs, for example, more hot reporting of radiographs by radiologists or radiographers should be considered.
  17. Content Article
    In this blog, Lotty Tizzard, Patient Safety Learning’s Content and Engagement Manager, looks at the safety issues faced by people with diabetes in hospital settings. Reflecting on feedback from Twitter users with diabetes, she looks at why so many people with diabetes fear having to stay in hospital, and asks what the NHS and its staff can do to make it a safer, less stressful environment.
  18. Content Article
    This article in the BMJ highlights a number of recent articles that reflect on the realities facing the health service after the first brutal years of the Covid-19 pandemic. It summarises and links to articles in the BMJ about the elective care backlog, A&E waiting times, remote appointments, Government pressures that stop senior clinicians speaking out about pressures, and the need for credible policy solutions. It also highlights an article outlining how Brexit and the Northern Ireland Protocol have resulted in the UK being denied access to European research funding and meetings.
  19. Content Article
    Ambulance services in England are under immense pressure. In July 2022, all ambulance services in England declared REAP (Resource Escalation Action Plan) level four, reflecting potential service failure. Volumes of calls to 999 are increasing, patients in distress and pain are waiting longer for help to reach them, and ambulance teams feel unable to do their job well. The new Secretary of State for Health and Social Care has previously named cutting ambulance waits as his number one priority. As he takes up the role for the second time, he will again need to include ambulances in his list of priorities for the health and care system. Steps taken to date to help address the underlying issues have not yet had an impact on the pressures facing ambulance services. This analysis from The Health Foundation looks at ambulance service performance and explores the contributing factors and priorities for improvement.
  20. Content Article
    This investigation by the Healthcare Safety Investigation Branch (HSIB) explores issues around patient handover to emergency care. Patients who wait in ambulances at an emergency department are at potential risk of coming to harm due to deterioration or not being able to access timely and appropriate treatment. This is the second interim bulletin published as part of this investigation, and findings so far emphasise that an effective response should consider the interactions of the whole system: an end-to-end approach that does not just focus on one area of healthcare and prioritises patient safety. The reference event in this investigation involves a patient who was found unconscious at home and taken to hospital by ambulance. They were then held in the ambulance at the emergency department for 3 hours and 20 minutes and during this time their condition did not improve. The patient was taken directly to the intensive care unit where they remained for nine days before being transferred to a specialist centre for further treatment.
  21. Content Article
    'State of Care' is the Care Quality Commission's annual assessment of health care and social care in England. The report looks at the trends, shares examples of good and outstanding care, and highlights where care needs to improve.
  22. Content Article
    This article tells the story of two-year-old Chloe, who died after hospital staff failed to recognise that she had meningitis, sending her home after her parents first took her to A&E. The NHS Trust carried out an internal investigation which identified many areas where care should have been better and set out a range of recommendations for improving care of children in A&E in the future. The Trust only apologised to the family after an out-of-court settlement was made.
  23. Content Article
    This study in BMJ Open examines the impacts of the four episodes of industrial action by English junior doctors in early 2016. The authors looked at the impact of the strikes on A&E visits, outpatient appointments and cancellations, admitted patients and all in-hospital mortality. The study concluded that industrial action by junior doctors during early 2016 had a significant impact on the healthcare provided by English hospitals. It also found that t here were regional variations in how these strikes affected providers, and that there was not a measurable increase in mortality on strike days.
  24. Event
    What do we miss? What do we do about it? An exploration of safety themes and the impact of harm leading to litigation. Promoting an awareness and understanding of Emergency Department claims as well as the cost of claims, both financial and human, to patients and the staff involved. This free training conference is only aimed at Emergency Department (ED) clinical staff and safety, quality and governance leads. Key topics: Reducing claims in ED – What can we do? What do we miss, what do we do about it? Claims relating to nursing care Shared learning – spreading the word Understanding the patient pathway Further information and tickets
  25. Content Article
    On 23 September, Improvement Cymru, the all-Wales Improvement service for NHS Wales, hosted an online session with colleagues from Holland to talk about patient flow in hospital. 
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