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Found 778 results
  1. News Article
    Young people with eating disorders are coming to harm and ending up in A&E because they are being denied care and forced to endure long waits for treatment, GPs have revealed. NHS eating disorders services are so overwhelmed by a post-Covid surge in problems such as anorexia that they are telling under-19s to rely on charities, their parents or self-help instead. The “truly shocking” findings about the help available to young people with often very fragile mental health emerged in a survey of 1,004 family doctors across the UK by the youth mental health charity stem4. The shortage of beds for children and young people with eating disorders is so serious that some are being sent hundreds of miles from home or ending up on adult psychiatric wards, GPs say. “The provision is awful and I worry my young patients may die,” one GP in the south-east of England told stem4. Another described the specialist NHS services available in their area as “virtually non-existent and not fit for purpose”. Read full story Source: The Guardian, 22 March 2023
  2. News Article
    Children must now be in crisis before they can be referred for an autism diagnosis, parents claim. The strict new eligibility criteria in the Bristol region comes after a 350% rise in the number waiting more than two years for assessment. Changes made by the NHS mean children will only be referred with "severe and enduring" mental health issues. The Integrated Care Board (ICB) said it meant resources could now focus on those with "the highest clinical need". Some parents have launched the campaign Assess for Autism in protest against the rule change. An Assess for Autism spokesperson said children would now have to be at crisis point before being referred, describing the policy as "deeply concerning" and "regressive". However, healthcare provider Sirona, which provides autism diagnosis services, and the Integrated Care Board (ICB), which formally approved the new policy, insist it is necessary because families are waiting too long. They said resources can now be focused on those with the "highest clinical need or are the most vulnerable". Read full story Source: BBC News, 22 March 2023
  3. News Article
    Hundreds of patients have lost their eyesight or had it irreparably damaged because of NHS backlogs, new research suggests. NHS England clinicians have filed 551 reports of patients who lost their sight as a result of delayed appointments since 2019, with 219 resulting in “moderate or severe harm”, according to an FoI request by the Association of Optometrists, which believes that hundreds more cases are unreported. Its chief executive, Adam Sampson, said sight loss was a “health emergency”, and urged ministers to introduce a national eye health strategy to enable high street and community optometrists to ease some of the burden on hospitals. He said: “There are good treatments available for common age-related eye conditions like macular degeneration but many hospital trusts simply do not have the capacity to deliver services. “Optometry is ideally placed to take away some of that burden – optometrists are already qualified to provide many of the extended services needed and are available on every high street, so patients can be treated closer to home. It’s incomprehensible and absolutely tragic that patients are waiting, losing their vision, in many parts of the country because of the way eye healthcare is commissioned.” Read full story Source: The Guardian, 21 March 2023
  4. News Article
    The pressure to tackle long waiting lists in children’s community services is impacting care quality, clinical leaders have warned. It comes after community health services waiting list figures were published for the first time by NHS England last week. They revealed more than 200,000 children were waiting, of whom 12,000 had been waiting more than a year, and 65,000 more than 18 weeks. While adult community services lists have been coming down fairly steadily since the autumn, children’s services are failing to make progress. The children’s services with the longest lists are community paediatrics (which mostly deals with neurological development issues such as autism and ADHD), speech and language therapy, and children’s occupational therapy. Specialists in those areas told HSJ it was the result of staffing gaps, rising and more complex demand, Covid backlog, and years of underfunding. Read full story (paywalled) Source: HSJ, 20 March 2023
  5. News Article
    More than 175,000 patient appointments and surgeries were postponed this week during the three-day junior doctor walk-out, it has emerged. NHS leaders have warned the strikes were the most disruptive yet with more appointments cancelled across three days than across any of the previous nurse strikes. Data published by the NHS showed in total 181,049 patients had their care postponed, this included more than 5,000 mental health and hundreds of community health appointments. The news comes after nursing and ambulance unions accepted a pay offer from the government, for a 5.3 per cent increase in 2023-24, which their members will now vote on. Read full story Source: The Independent, 18 March 2023
  6. News Article
    The NHS’s efforts to prop up emergency departments with thousands of additional medical staff has been the wrong approach to solving the crisis in these services, experts have argued. Analysis of NHS staffing data by HSJ shows the emergency care medical workforce has grown by almost two-thirds since 2016, far outstripping the growth in other specialties. Despite this, waiting times in accident and emergency have deteriorated significantly over the same period. John Appleby, chief economist at the Nuffield Trust think tank, said: “Cramming the A&E department with more doctors doesn’t look like it’s having the intended effect over the last four to five years. Waiting times have got worse and we have more staff. “Increasing staffing has helped with waiting times in the past, but maybe we have reached a point where it’s not staffing in A&E which is the issue. The issue is the front door and the backdoor of the A&E.” Read full story (paywalled) Source: HSJ, 17 March 2023
  7. News Article
    The disruption caused by the junior doctors' strike in England could take weeks to resolve, health bosses say. Tens of thousands of appointments and treatments, including cancer care, had to be cancelled during the three-day walkout. Patients with appointments coming up may see them cancelled to make room for high-priority cases hit by the strike. Hospitals are also reporting problems discharging patients from wards, as consultants were sent to cover A&E. Saffron Cordery, of NHS Providers, which represents NHS trusts, said the scale and length of the walkout, coupled with the fact it started on a Monday - traditionally the busiest day of the week - had made it more difficult than previous strikes by nurses and ambulance staff. "It will take weeks to recover - just rebooking patients who have treatments and appointments cancelled is a big job," she said. "Patients have to be individually prioritised - it may mean some patients with bookings in the coming weeks being pushed further back." Read full story Source: BBC News, 16 March 2023
  8. News Article
    Data revealed for the first time shows nearly three-quarters of adult patients needing community mental health care are waiting more than four weeks for treatment to start, which is the timeframe that NHS England wants to introduce as a national standard. Figures shared with HSJ also show two-thirds of children needing community care are waiting more than four weeks from referral to treatment. In 2021, NHS England proposed a series of new waiting time standards in mental health, including a four-week standard for non-urgent community care. A lack of new funding, as well as data recording problems, mean the new standards have not so far been introduced, and no timeline set for implementation. Read full story (paywalled) Source: HSJ, 14 March 2023
  9. Content Article
    A BBC Newsnight investigation hears devastating evidence and testimony of ambulance failings in the north east of England. What does it take to run a safe service that patients can trust? 
  10. Content Article
    On 24 May 2022, Mrs Brind went to see her GP and was taken to Queen Elizabeth Hospital arriving at 13.05 hours. The Emergency Department was busy and Mrs Brind remained on the ambulance. Physiological observations were undertaken at 12.50, 13.24 and 13.53 which showed an elevated NEWS2 score. Mrs Brind required increasing oxygen which was not escalated to the ambulance navigator at the hospital, no further physiological observations were undertaken and no ECG was undertaken. Mrs Brind was taken to the ward at 17.30 hours, when she became agitated and short of breath. Advanced life support was put into place but Mrs Brind’s condition continued to deteriorate and she died at 17.52 hours.
  11. Content Article
    Julie Smith, Topic Leader for the hub and Content Director at EIDO Healthcare, takes a look at how patient information can be used to help improve outcomes for those on long surgical waiting lists.
  12. Content Article
    How did the fallout from the pandemic affect people across different ethnic groups, and was the impact of those cancelled procedures spread evenly? This Nuffield Trust analysis, supported by the NHS Race and Health Observatory, seeks to answer these questions.
  13. Content Article
    To support recovery of the NHS by improving waiting times and patient experience, a joint Department of Health and Social Care (DHSC) and NHS England plan sets out a number of ambitions, including: Patients being seen more quickly in emergency departments: with the ambition to improve to 76% of patients being admitted, transferred or discharged within four hours by March 2024, with further improvement in 2024/25. Ambulances getting to patients quicker: with improved ambulance response times for Category 2 incidents to 30 minutes on average over 2023/24, with further improvement in 2024/25 towards pre-pandemic levels. NHS England has engaged with a wide range of stakeholders to develop the plan, and it draws on a diverse range of opinion and experience, as well as views of patients and users. The Department of Health and Social Care, who produced the content on actions being taken in social care, have led on engagement with the sector.
  14. Content Article
    Whether it is the waiting lists for mental health support or the inadequacies of long-Covid clinics, millions of patients with long-term health conditions have been struggling for years to get basic healthcare. The chaotic decline that has befallen acute care in A&E has hit day-to-day services, with effects from delayed consultant appointments and year-long clinic waiting lists to slashed community care. Mental health bed shortages mean young people need now to have “attempted suicide several times” before they get a place in an inpatient unit in England. Record delays for cancer treatment are leaving patients facing lethal waits. Thousands of people with neurological conditions are waiting up to two years to even see a consultant. For them, the ground has long been shaking. It is just that no one else noticed. The Guardian has spoken to disabled people the length and breadth of England and Wales about their wait for care. For them, the NHS is not an “in case of emergency” service but the engine they rely on to keep their day-to-day life running.
  15. Content Article
    This article in The Times explains why the Times Health Commission was set up, what it aims to achieve and how it will do this. The year-long commission aims to address the most urgent challenges facing health and social care including the growing pressure on budgets, the A&E crisis, rising waiting lists, health inequalities, obesity and the ageing population. Commissioners will draw up recommendations in ten areas to identify problems and find solutions. The Commission will publish its final report in January 2024.
  16. Content Article
    Emergency access to healthcare is in crisis. Unmet need in primary and community care and low capacity in hospitals and social care has left the emergency health services gridlocked and overwhelmed, unable to provide safe care. This Cross party House of Lords Public Services Committee report recommends that a COBR Committee be assigned the responsibility to address the crisis in emergency healthcare. In the long-term, it recommends a a substantial overhaul is needed, one which sets out a bold new operating model for the system as a whole, and which is backed by equally bold leadership.
  17. Content Article
    In this blog Patient Safety Learning considers the impact on patient safety of the shortage of hospital beds facing the NHS this winter. It focuses on two specific issues stemming from this, the increasing numbers of patients being cared for in corridors and other non-clinical areas, and current proposals to reduce the number of patients waiting to be discharged.
  18. Content Article
    Young people and expert mental healthcare staff say patients are unlikely to receive in-patient mental health care unless they “have attempted suicide multiple times”, according to a new report published by Look Ahead Care and Support. Launched in the House of Lords, the report – funded by Wates Family Enterprise Trust and produced by experts Care Research – argues Accident and Emergency departments have become an ‘accidental hub’ for children and young people experiencing crisis but are ill-equipped to offer the treatment required.   Based on in-depth interviews with service users, parents and carers, and NHS and social care staff from across England, the findings from the Look Ahead Care and Support report draws on experience of treating depression, anxiety, self-harm, suicidal thoughts and suicide attempts, eating disorders, addiction and psychosis.  
  19. Content Article
    With the NHS under relentless pressure this winter and as records keep getting broken for all the wrong reasons, Helen Buckingham takes a closer look at why hospitals are so full, and emphasises the importance of supporting and helping the health service’s staff.
  20. Content Article
    In this letter to Steve Barclay MP, Secretary of State for Health and Social Care, the chair and chief executive of the Patients Association, Sir Robert Francis and Rachel Power, raised their concerns about how the Government is dealing with the growing crisis in health and social care. The letter asked him to declare a national incident in the NHS and to publish solutions to the current crisis, developed with patients and carers. The letter also asked the Minister to publish the long-term workforce plan and includes an offer from the Patients Association to work with the Department for Health and Social Care (DHSC).
  21. Content Article
    In this article, Richard Murray, Chief Executive of The King's Fund, reflects on what 2023 has in store for the health and care system in England. Acknowledging the intense pressure all services are currently under, he highlights that patients aren't currently receiving the care they need meaning that coping with operational challenges is going to dominate the early part of the year for the health and care sector. He warns of the futility of the Government adding new performance management measures to the sector, and expresses hope that Integrated Care Boards (ICBs) could make a difference by bringing together stakeholders to tackle longer-term problems such as integration, population health and inequalities.
  22. Content Article
    Hospitals are crammed full of patients, the staffing crisis in adult social care continues to escalate, and alarming numbers of junior doctors report that they are planning to quit their NHS posts to work abroad. The multiple problems confronting the UK’s health and care system are interconnected and have been years in the making. While the pandemic exacerbated many of them, hugely increasing pressures on staff, political failures and, above all, a lack of investment are making it impossible for the service to stand still this winter – let alone recover. This Guardian Editorial gives its view on the current state of the NHS.
  23. Content Article
    Crammed wards, burned-out GPs, patients waiting hours for ambulances – the health service is at breaking point. The Guardian journalists, Andrew Gregory and Denis Campbell, take a look at the current NHS situation.
  24. Content Article
    This report from the Institute for Fiscal Studies examines how NHS funding, resources and treatment volumes compare with pre-pandemic levels. The study examines how the funding, staffing and hospital beds available to the NHS have changed since 2019, comparing the number of patients treated by the NHS in eight different areas compares with 2019 levels. For most areas of care, the NHS is still struggling to treat more people than it was pre-pandemic, despite having – on the face of it – additional staff and funding. The report considers a range of different factors that could explain this seeming fall in performance and output. 
  25. Content Article
    Patients are facing increased delays at almost every stage of their NHS treatment, as the health system struggles to find the resources to deal with demand. The latest data shows waiting lists across England have surpassed record highs every month for two years running, one of many major challenges currently facing the NHS. But what impact does this have on ordinary people trying to access the NHS in 2022? Through a combination of interviews with health professionals and analysis of official data, the Guardian has plotted the journeys of four fictional patients through their NHS journey and how waiting times have changed at each stage of their treatment and recovery.
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