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Found 603 results
  1. Content Article
    Tips, advice and guidance on where you can get support for your mental health during the coronavirus (COVID-19) pandemic. If you’re worried about the impact of coronavirus on your mental health, you are not alone. The COVID-19 pandemic is a new and uncertain time for all of us and will affect our mental health in different ways. However you are feeling right now is valid. With the right help and support, we can get through this. Here is you will find advice from Young Minds on things you can do to keep mentally healthy during this time.  
  2. Content Article
    This guidance wriiten by the Royal College of Nursing, is for health care professionals, service providers and those involved with planning and commissioning services. It sets out the RCN’s perspective on contemporary and future children and young people’s nursing services in the home and community setting. It also underlines the increasingly crucial role played by community children’s nurses as they provide integrated care closer to home. It explores the legislative and policy agenda, defines the role of the CCN, sets out the core principles of providing care, considers variations in how the needs of families are assessed across the four countries of the UK and outlines examples of current models of care and service delivery.
  3. Content Article
    Matt Darling was worried when his 15-month-old daughter, Jem Darling, began to show signs of brain cancer. When his worst fears were confirmed, Matt took on the role of an advocate for his daughter. While in the hospital, Matt witnessed firsthand the harm that is caused by a fragmented information environment in hospitals, spurring his development of the world's first safety critical clinical workflow engine. In this short film, produced by The Patient Safety Movement (Australian based), Matt tells his story. 
  4. Content Article
    Healthy eating and fitness mobile apps are designed to promote healthier living. However, for young people, body dissatisfaction is commonplace, and these types of apps can become a source of maladaptive eating and exercise behaviours. Furthermore, such apps are designed to promote continuous engagement, potentially fostering compulsive behaviours. This study, published by JMIR Publications, highlights the necessity for careful considerations around the design of apps that promote weight loss or body modification through fitness training, especially when they are used by young people who are vulnerable to the development of poor body image and maladaptive eating and exercise behaviours.
  5. Content Article
    The emergence in December 2019 of COVID-19, caused by a novel coronavirus, and its subsequent spread around the world, led the World Health Organisation to declare a pandemic on March 11, 2020: the first to be caused by a coronavirus . The virus appears to have originated in bats, with spread to humans likely mediated by an intermediate mammalian. This paper by Dr Nicole Le Saux, discusses the current epidemiology for COVID 19 in children.
  6. Content Article
    A growing number of studies have focused on 2019 novel coronavirus disease (COVID-19) since its outbreak, but few data are available on epidemiological features and transmission patterns of children with COVID-19. This study, published in Pediatrics journal, examined the epidemiological characteristics and transmission patterns of 2143 paediatric patients with COVID-19, using a retrospective analytical approach.  The authors found that children at all ages were susceptible to COVID-19, but no significant gender difference was found. Clinical manifestations of paediatric patients were generally less severe than those of adults’ patients. However, young children, particularly infants, were vulnerable to 2019-nCoV infection.
  7. Content Article
    Lots of our children are worried about the coronavirus (COVID-19) pandemic, so the Maltings Surgery put together a short explainer video to help lower the anxiety levels amongst our younger generation. Be kind to each other and yourselves.
  8. Content Article
    Sam Cartwright-Hatton and Abby Dunn have put together this useful sheet with tips on how we should talk to our children about COVID-19. The Flourishing Families Clinic is a totally new innovation in the NHS, piloted by Sussex Partnership NHS Foundation Trust. It's a specialist clinic, based in adult mental health services, that supports parents seeking treatment for mild to moderate mental health difficulties.
  9. Content Article
    This blog written by Adams mum gives praise to the domestic staff that work with in our hospitals. She explains how the domestic staff were a source of support and company for Adam and the family when he was admitted. Adams mum is a mother an academic, lawyer and lay advisor.
  10. Content Article
    'Visiting the Intensive Care Unit' is an activity book for children who are visiting a relative in an intensive care unit (ICU). This resource is free to NHS hospitals.
  11. Content Article
    Paediatric cardiac arrest is unlikely to be caused by a cardiac problem and is more likely to be a respiratory one, making ventilations crucial to the child’s chances of survival. However, for those not trained in paediatric resuscitation, the most important thing is to act quickly to ensure the child gets the treatment they need in the critical situation.  This page contains:an EPALS algorithm for paediatric COVID-19 patients.a flowchart on the resuscitation of paediatric COVID-19 patients in hospital. 
  12. Content Article
    This video made by Health Education England and the Restraint Reduction Network looks at the impact of inappropriately used restraint practices in mental health and learning disability services. Three people with lived experience of restraint discuss the impact it has had on their lives and why they are campaigning for change.
  13. Content Article
    The Department for Health and Social Care has launched an investigation into allegations made by 22 former patients of mental health units run by private firm The Huntercombe Group. The group ran at least six children’s mental health hospitals between 2012 and 2022. In this Independent article, young women who were subject to humiliating and sometimes abusive treatment talk about their time as inpatients. Some of the experiences they recount are harrowing: "I would get awoken by staff members restraining me out of bed and dragging me down to the de-escalation room to force-feed me." "Patients were left naked in their rooms under anti-ligature blankets because they wouldn’t buy anti-ligature clothing." "I distinctly remember someone saying ‘if you hit me again, I’ll hit you back ten times harder because there are no cameras in here and you can’t cry to [name of nurse] about it’."
  14. Content Article
    In this blog, Debbie Ivanova, Deputy Chief Inspector — People with a learning disability and autistic people, and Jemima Burnage, Deputy Chief Inspector and Mental Health Lead, update on progress since the Care Quality Commission’s (CQC) 'Out of Sight' report published in October 2020. Their blog discusses the findings of the authors' 'Restraint, segregation and seclusion review: Progress report' published in December 2021.
  15. Content Article
    In this report, the Care Quality Commission (CQC) comments on progress following publication of its 'Out of sight – who cares?' report in October 2020, and highlights the main areas where further work is still needed.
  16. Content Article
    This study in JAMA Network Open aimed to investigate whether attention-deficit/hyperactivity disorder (ADHD) is over diagnosed in children and adolescents. The authors reviewed 334 published studies and found convincing evidence that ADHD is over diagnosed. They highlight that the harms associated with ADHD diagnosis may outweigh the benefits, particularly in children and young people with milder symptoms.
  17. Content Article
    The STOMP and STAMP programme of work is about making sure children and young people with a learning disability, autism or both are only prescribed the right medication, at the right time and for the right reason. This leaflet produced by Royal College of Paediatrics and Child Health and NHS England provides information to parents about psychotropic medicines.
  18. Content Article
    This survey from Kopecky et al. assessed the in-hospital needs of patients diagnosed with autism spectrum disorders (ASDs). 
  19. Content Article
    This annual report from the University of Bristol provides information about the deaths of people with a learning disability aged four years and over notified to the programme.
  20. Content Article
    The creation of a national network of medical examiners (MEs) was recommended in the Shipman inquiry and was alluded to in the Mid-Staffordshire and Morecambe Bay public inquiries. The Parliamentary Under-Secretary of State for Health, Lord O’Shaughnessy, confirmed in October 2017 that a national system of medical examiners will be introduced from April 2019. The ME reforms set out in the 2009 Coroners Act will be implemented nationally in two phases. By April 2019, NHS trusts should set up non-statutory schemes, based upon the national pilots (particularly in Leicester, Sheffield and Gloucester), funded in part from cremation form fees, in preparation for the commencement of a statutory scheme in 2020/21. A National Medical Examiner will be appointed, reporting directly to the National Director of Patient Safety.
  21. Content Article
    Improving and widening access to care for children and adults needing mental health support is a key priority for the NHS, as outlined in the Long Term Plan. Tthe West of England AHSN are working with NHS commissioners and providers, industry partners, other AHSNs, local trusts, Child and Adolescent Mental Health Services (CAMHS) and community providers on a wide range of initiatives to support their work to improve mental healthcare and wellbeing.
  22. Content Article
    As parents and carers, there are ways we can support our children to give them the best chance to stay mentally healthy. Encouraging and guiding a child to think about their own mental health and wellbeing are vital skills you can teach them from a young age. Find out how you can help a child to have good mental health, including knowing how to talk to a child about their mental health, and when to spot signs they might be struggling. Plus get self-care tips for you, to help you look after your mental health while caring for others, and find out how to get more support if you, your child or your family need it.
  23. Content Article
    The purpose of this investigation by the Healthcare Safety Investigation Branch (HSIB) is to help improve patient safety in relation to the prescribing of medicines for children based on their weight. This HSIB investigation reviewed the case of a four-year-old child who was diagnosed with a blood clot in her leg following a surgical procedure in hospital. She was prescribed an anticoagulant medicine using an electronic prescribing and medicines administration (ePMA) system. Errors in the prescription, dispensing and administration processes meant that the child received ten times the intended dose on five separate occasions over three days. A scan of the child’s brain showed evidence of a bleed and she was admitted to the paediatric intensive care unit. Following three months in hospital, the child was discharged home with an ongoing care plan.
  24. Content Article
    In this anonymous blog, the author argues that clinicians need to consider the impact of their words when they are communicating medical findings and diagnoses to patients. Drawing on her daughter’s experience of seeking psychiatric support, she explains how a more humane approach might have prevented additional harm. 
  25. Content Article
    In this blog, Lotty Tizzard, Patient Safety Learning's Content and Engagement Manager, writes about a recent experience taking her son to a local walk-in centre. She describes the negative response she received when asking questions about her son's treatment, and considers the potentially dangerous consequences of patients and parents being disempowered to fully understand and contribute to their own, or their children's, care.
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