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Showing results for tags 'Learning disabilities'.
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EventIn this conversation, James Munro, CEO of Care Opinion, will speak with Dr Lauren Paige Ramsey of the University of Leeds. They will be talking about the safety of people with learning disabilities in care settings, and what we can learn about that from feedback shared on Care Opinion. Here is the research we will be discussing: Systemic safety inequities for people with learning disabilities: a qualitative integrative analysis of the experiences of English health and social care for people with learning disabilities, their families and carers Do join us for this conversation: everyone is welcome. You don't need any academic or research experience. You don't even have to read the paper! Each conversation will last about 15 minutes, followed by time for questions. Once you register for this event you will be able to post comments and questions, in advance or during the conversation. You can also share the event, or post questions, on Twitter using the hashtag #corc The conversation will be recorded and available here immediately after the event, or later via the Care Opinion blog.
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- Health inequalities
- Health Disparities
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EventuntilIn this webinar from Learning Disability Today, Alexis Quinn, autistic woman and author; Dr Jeremy Tudway, Clinical Director for Dimensions, and Max Green, Ambassador for the National Autistic Society, talk about how communication is key to providing good care to people with a learning disability and/or autism. It looks at how professionals communicate with the people they are supporting, what they do and don’t say, and how they say it. This webinar is for: GPs Psychiatrists Practice managers Professionals working with people with a learning disability and/or autism People with a learning disability and/or autism The panellists will discuss how communication is essential to improve the care and quality of life of people with a learning disability and/or autism. In the first part of this talk, Alexis Quinn talks about her experience in an Assessment and Treatment Unit (ATU) where she was over-medicated and subjected to restraint and seclusion. She will also discuss how support in the community could have prevented her hospital stay. In the second part of the talk, Dr Jeremy Tudway, Clinical Director for Dimensions, and Max Green, Ambassador for the National Autistic Society, will talk about how communication is key, looking at how professionals communicate with the people they are supporting, what they do and don’t say, and how they say it. Register
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EventuntilThe purpose of this event is to update anyone working to support people with learning disabilities and autistic people about the progress to date on the work currently taking place with partners to design, develop, trial and develop the training. It will allow stakeholders the opportunity to highlight issues arising from the trial. Who should attend? Anyone working to support people with learning disabilities and autism, including: Self advocates and user led groups Campaigners Health and social care employers Self-advocacy groups Training providers Commissioners of learning disability and autism services Register here
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EventuntilThe COVID-19 pandemic has exposed huge problems with the way Do Not Attempt Cardiopulmonary Resuscitation (DNACPR) decisions are made, understood and communicated with people with learning disabilities and their families and carers. There have been reports of unlawful blanket decision-making and of DNACPR orders noted without discussion with the people involved. This webinar will focus on some of the questions that have been raised over the past year. What exactly is DNACPR? Why are the terms DNR or DNAR unhelpful, confusing and potentially dangerous? In what circumstances is CPR not a good option, and DNACPR therefore appropriate? How should those decisions be made? Who should be involved? What if the person lacks capacity for a DNACPR decision – how can we make decisions based on best interest? Register
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- Learning disabilities
- Communication
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EventuntilPeople with learning disabilities are at risk of dying too young, and dying unnecessarily. The Learning Disability Mortality Review (LeDeR) in England has found that too often, those deaths are a result of failings within health and social care provision. Reflecting on this has never been more important – during the pandemic, the inequalities that many people with learning disabilities face have been put into stark focus. Today we focus on the stories of Oliver’s and Richard's deaths, and on what lessons we can all learn from this. Oliver McGowan died in 2016. He was 18 years old. Oliver had mild learning disabilities and autism. A recent independent LeDeR review concluded Oliver’s death was avoidable. Richard Handley died in 2012 at the age of 33, from complications arising from constipation. He had Down syndrome and mental health problems. The inquest into his death concluded that their had been “gross failures” in his care and treatment. Paula McGowan and Sheila Handley share the stories of their sons’ lives, and of the healthcare failings that contributed to their deaths. Oliver’s and Richard’s stories are profoundly important and profoundly moving. Register
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- Patient death
- Autism
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Content ArticleThe government has published a draft Mental Health Bill for pre-legislative scrutiny. The bill aims to modernise the Mental Health Act for the 21st century.
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- Mental health
- Policies
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Content ArticleThis Healthcare Safety Investigation Branch (HSIB) investigation explores medicines omission among patients with learning disabilities who are cared for in medium and low secure wards in mental health hospitals. A medicine omission is when a patient doesn't receive medicines that have been prescribed to them, and the investigation focused on a number of factors that could contribute to omission: the environment in which medicines administration takes place the availability and use of learning disability nurses in these environments the skills required for nurses to help patients with learning disabilities be involved in choices about their medicines. For it's reference event, the investigation looked at the case of Luke, who was detained in a medium secure ward of a mental health hospital. He spent 21 months on the ward before moving into a low secure ward at the same hospital, where he stayed for a further 11 months. Both wards were specifically designated for patients with learning disabilities. While at the hospital, there were a number of periods when Luke was not given the physical health medication he had been prescribed for his diabetes and high cholesterol. Although Luke’s medication record regularly noted that Luke refused the medication, Luke and his Mother disagreed with this version of events, stating that other factors led to Luke’s medicine omissions.
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- Learning disabilities
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Content ArticleInvestigation of a complaint against the Belfast Health and Social Care Trust A Trust’s failure to perform an examination of a patient on admission to hospital meant he was not assessed by medical staff against this baseline during his time on the ward.
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- Investigation
- Patient death
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Content ArticleThe Regulation and Quality Improvement Authority (RQIA) has published its independent 'Review of the implementation of recommendations to prevent choking incidents in Northern Ireland'. The Review examined the measures and governance arrangements in place to prevent choking, in line with current guidance, focusing on the work undertaken in high-risk areas across health and social care, including stroke care, care of the elderly and services for those with physical and/or mental health and learning disabilities. The Review found that there was a clear and urgent need to improve the quality and safety of care provided to people at risk of choking. The key recommendations in the Review include: training for staff including clinicians, catering and domestic teams; shorter waiting times for assessment by Speech and Language Therapy; better systems for communication between staff, and safer systems for ordering and storing food.
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- Recommendations
- Patient death
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Content ArticleThis study in the International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health examines the demographic, clinical and socioeconomic factors associated with diagnosis of Long Covid in children aged 5 to 18 years. The authors conducted a population-based cross-sectional study using data from 20,601 children living in Israel who tested positive for Covid between 1 February 2020 and 30 June 2021. They found several variables associated with the development of Long Covid, including: the severity of acute infection being hospitalised recurrent acute infection ADHD diagnosis chronic allergic rhinitis chronic urticaria. The authors call for heightened clinical awareness that Long Covid can be present in children, and highlight that this should affect public health policy because of Covid-19's long-term health impacts.
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- Long Covid
- Children and Young People
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Content ArticleThis study in the journal Health and Social Care Delivery Research mapped interventions aimed at reducing restrictive practices in children and young people’s institutional settings around the world. It also assessed which process elements led promising behaviour change techniques, and compared the results with a companion review of adult psychiatric inpatient settings. In the first evidence review of its kind, the authors found that interventions tend to be complex, reporting is inconsistent and robust evaluation data are limited. But they did find some behaviour change techniques that warrant further research. They argue that better evidence could help address the urgent need for effective strategies.
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- Mental health
- Mental health - CAMHS
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Content ArticleThis guideline from the National Institute for Health and Care Excellence (NICE) covers assessment, management and preventing recurrence for children, young people and adults who have self-harmed. It includes those with a mental health problem, neurodevelopmental disorder or learning disability and applies to all sectors that work with people who have self-harmed.
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- Self harm/ suicide
- Recommendations
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Content ArticleThink Local Act Personal (TLAP) is a national partnership of more than 50 organisations committed to transforming health and care through personalisation and community-based support. TLAP developed the Making It Real framework to support good personalised care for providers, commissioners and people who access services. These "I" statements are part of Making It Real, and they articulate what good care and support looks like if you are someone who accesses services.
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- Communication
- Patient engagement
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Content Article
RCPath - Medical examiners good practice series
Patient-Safety-Learning posted an article in Processes
This Good Practice Series published by The Royal College of Pathologists is a topical collection of focused summary documents, designed to be easily read and digested by busy front-line staff. The documents contain links to further reading, guidance and support, and cover the following topics: Supporting people of Black, Asian and minority ethnic heritage Urgent release of a body Learning disability and autism Organ and tissue donation Post-mortem examinations Child deaths Mental health and eating disorders Out-of-hours arrangements- Posted
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- Medical examiner
- Health inequalities
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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.
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- Healthcare
- Social Care
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Content ArticleEverybody has a right to good care. Much attention is rightly focused on the occasions when people experience poor quality care, but it is also important to recognise where care is good and to celebrate the services that are getting it right. Some care providers do things well through innovative new ways of working, or by doing the basics well. Others can learn from them and solutions should be shared across the system. This publication from the Care Quality Commission (CQC) is purposely focused on celebrating good and outstanding care that CQC's inspectors have seen.
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- Regulatory issue
- Quality improvement
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Content ArticlePain is spoken about often within health and social care. Patients might be asked to locate our pain during examinations, to rate our level of pain or to describe the type of pain we are feeling. They may be forewarned of the possibilities of pain occurring during or after procedures or operations. Medical consent forms often include reference to the risk of pain and require a signature to confirm they have been appropriately ‘informed’. Pain can be acute (lasting less than 12 weeks) or chronic (lasting more than 12 weeks), and the way we experience it, our thresholds, can also vary. It can be our body’s way of warning us of potential damage, yet it can also occur when no actual harm is happening to the body.[1] It can cause trauma, physiological reactions, mental health difficulties and chronic fatigue, and can have a huge impact on someone’s quality of life and ability to perform daily tasks.[2] Pain is undoubtedly complex, but is it a patient safety issue?[3]
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- Pain
- Unconscious bias
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Content ArticleThis report seeks to inform the six-month review of the Coronavirus legislation required by the Coronavirus Act 2020 along with any future response to a “second wave” of the virus later this year. The report begins by setting out the legislative framework in play, then focuses on the following themes and rights: Human rights impact of the lockdown (Articles 8, 9, 10 and 11 ECHR) The right to life, including both the substantive and procedural duties on government (Articles 2 and 3 ECHR) and the right to health which has been (partially) incorporated within the positive obligation to secure the right to life. Issues in relation to detention settings (Articles 5, 8, 3 and 2 ECHR) Contact tracing and privacy rights (Articles 8 and 14 ECHR) Access to justice (Articles 6 and 2 ECHR) Children’s rights —the right to education (Article 2 of Protocol 1 ECHR) and the right to family life (Article 8 ECHR) The report also reflects on the challenge of ensuring the emergency legislation required in response to the outbreak was subject to appropriate parliamentary scrutiny and review. Follow the link below to read the full report including conclusions and recommendations.
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- Pandemic
- Patient harmed
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Content ArticleThis is a book written to celebrate the humanity of people, and to share experiences of what brilliant care and support can look like for families with learning disabled or autistic children and adults. Sara Ryan steers clear of jargon and 'doublespeak' to conjure authentic experiences of families. Speaking with families and professionals, she conveys the love, laughter and joy which binds families and the harsh realities many face; of separation from loved ones, substandard care and frustration and helplessness in the face of inflexible services. From their experiences, Sara looks to capture those pockets of brilliance that families have encountered, and which outstanding practitioners have pioneered, for us all to learn from. We know so much about what support and services should look like in order to enable flourishing lives - this book aims to help families and professionals to achieve it, together.
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- Organisational culture
- Autism
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Content ArticleA report by Fiona Ritchie OBE, Chair on behalf of Oliver’s Independent Panel for NHS England and NHS Improvement, has been published following an investigation into Bristol, North Somerset and South Gloucestershire clinical commissioning group’s Learning Disability Mortality Review (LeDeR) review into the death of Oliver McGowan.
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- Autism
- Learning disabilities
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Content ArticleThe State of Care is the Care Quality Commission (CQC) 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. The care that people received in 2019/20 was mostly of good quality. But while the quality of care was largely maintained compared with the previous year, there was generally no improvement overall. And in the space of a few short months since then, the pandemic has placed the severest of challenges on the whole health and care system in England.
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- Social care
- Community care
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Content ArticleOlder people and people with an intellectual disability who receive long-term care are considered particularly vulnerable to infection outbreaks, such as the current coronavirus pandemic. The combination of healthcare concerns and infection-related restrictions may result in specific challenges for long-term care staff serving these populations during infection outbreaks. This review from Embregts et al. aimed to: (1) provide insight about the potential impact of infection outbreaks on the psychological state of healthcare staff and (2) explore suggestions to support and protect their psychological well-being. They found that research into support for long-term care staff during an infection outbreak is scarce. Without conscious management, policy and research focus, the needs of this professional group may remain underexposed in current and future infection outbreaks. The content synthesis and reflection on it in this article provide starting points for new research and contribute to the preparation for future infection outbreaks.
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- Psychological safety
- Staff support
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Content ArticleThe Accessible Information Standard directs and defines a specific, consistent approach to identifying, recording, flagging, sharing and meeting individuals’ information and communication support needs by NHS and adult social care service providers.
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- Communication
- Information sharing
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Content ArticleThe Care Quality Commission (CQC) has published the second report of Professor Glynis Murphy’s independent review of its regulation of Whorlton Hall between 2015 and 2019. CQC commissioned Professor Murphy to conduct an independent review to look at whether the abuse of patients at Whorlton Hall could have been recognised earlier by the regulatory process and to make recommendations for how CQC can improve its regulation of similar services in the future. In addition, CQC asked Professor Murphy to conduct a review of international research evidence to look at how abuse is detected within services for adults with a learning disability and autistic people and how such detection can be improved. The first report of Professor Murphy’s review made a number of recommendations for CQC to strengthen its inspection and regulatory approach for mental health, learning disability and/or autism services. This second report outlines the progress that CQC has made to implement the recommendations. This includes publication of the final report of its review of restraint, seclusion and segregation; work on closed cultures and the development of a tool for rating support plans.
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- Legal issue
- Patient safety incident
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Content ArticleIn the summer of 2019, following a televised Panorama programme showing abusive care of people with learning disabilities and/or autism in Whorlton Hall (an independent hospital in the north of England), the Care Quality Commission (CQC) requested an independent review of its inspections of Whorlton Hall. Professor Glynis Murphy was appointed to conduct the review.
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- Recommendations
- Regulatory issue
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