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Showing results for tags 'Organisation / service factors'.
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Content ArticleFor some time now I've been looking to find out more about mental health services in Trieste, Italy. Then I met Vincenzo Passante Spaccapietra, co-host of the Place of Safety? podcast series. This has enabled me to learn more about the closure of the mental institutions in Trieste, Italy, and the work of Franco Basaglia. I was keen to find out what really took place, what this really means in practice and how we can adopt this model in the UK. We were delighted to have become involved and to have recorded a couple of podcasts. I recommend this resource to everyone interested in safe, compassionate, patient led mental health care.
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- Mental health unit
- Commissioner
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Content ArticleAngela Hayes discusses the global impact healthcare has on climate change and the effect it has on our health.
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- Physical environment
- Leadership
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Content ArticleThe Centre for Sustainable Healthcare hosts and supports a number of networks to enable communities of like-minded people to collaborate internationally on sustainability in their clinical specialty or area of interest. Whether you are a patient, health professional, commissioner, educator or other, you can sign up or log in to join in discussion, find out about events and resources, ask questions and share ideas for sustainable healthcare in your field.
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- Climate change
- Organisation / service factors
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Content ArticleIdentifying a route to net zero emissions for a complex system as large as the NHS is particularly challenging. To understand how and when the NHS can reach net zero we established an NHS Net Zero Expert Panel, reviewed nearly 600 pieces of evidence submitted to us and conducted extensive analysis and modelling. The targets set are as ambitious as possible, while remaining realistic; and are supported by immediate action and a commitment to continuous monitoring, evaluation and innovation. The aim is to be the world’s first net zero national health service.
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- Climate change
- Patient safety strategy
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Content ArticleA new AHRQ resource, “Reducing Healthcare Carbon Emissions: A Primer on Measures and Actions for Healthcare Organizations to Mitigate Climate Change,” is now available to help healthcare organisations reduce their carbon footprint and protect communities from climate threats. AHRQ contracted with the Institute for Healthcare Improvement to develop the primer. It describes six domains contributing to greenhouse gas emissions in healthcare: building energy; transportation; anaesthetic gas; pharmaceuticals and chemicals; medical devices and supplies; and food. The primer identifies measures to track progress toward reducing greenhouse gas emissions in each domain. It also features vignettes of what health systems have done to reduce emissions and includes resources and tools to support implementation.
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- Climate change
- Physical environment
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Content ArticleIn this issue of HSJ's fortnightly briefing, Emily Townsend looks at why we are still not listening to patients and their families after harrowing reports of abuse and poor care at NHS mental health facilities surfaced last year.
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- Mental health
- Investigation
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Content ArticleThe dangerous practice of sending people with a mental illness hundreds of miles away from home for weeks at a time continues in England, according to new analysis published by the Royal College of Psychiatrists. Despite Government pledges to end the shameful practice, known as inappropriate out of area placements, by March 2021, almost 206,000 days have been spent by patients out of area in the 12 months since the deadline passed. Being far away from home, with friends and family not being able to visit, can leave patients feeling extremely isolated and emotionally distressed with devastating, long-lasting consequences for their mental health. Not only that, but it comes at a huge cost to the NHS. The health service spent £102 million on inappropriate out of area placements last year – the equivalent to the cost of the annual salary of over 900 consultant psychiatrists. The Royal College of Psychiatrists is calling on the NHS to adopt a ‘zero tolerance’ approach to inappropriate out of area placements and to take urgent action to ensure all patients get the care they need from properly staffed, specialist services in their local area.
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- Mental health
- Organisation / service factors
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Content ArticleAngie Middleton, Patient Safety Lead for Mental Health (London Region), presents on the Mental Health Suicide Report and discusses London's incident reporting. She highlights that we need to understand whether the extent to which the increase in reported incidents is as a result of more consistent reporting, or an actual increase in actual incidents or as a result of an increase in the number of patients accessing secondary mental health services. She asks whether there is a way of collectively getting timely, consistent and accurate data for multiagency use, and how we can collectively reduce suicides by 10% by 2020/21.
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- Patient safety incident
- Self harm/ suicide
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Content ArticleImproving experiences and outcomes for children and adults who are autistic or have a learning disability, their families and carers Ask Listen Do resources are designed to: support organisations to listen, learn from and improve the experiences of children and adults who are autistic or have a learning disability, their families and carers make it easier for people, families and paid carers to give feedback, raise concerns and complain.
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- Organisation / service factors
- Learning disabilities
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Content ArticleThis NICE guideline covers services for children, young people and adults with a learning disability (or autism and a learning disability) and behaviour that challenges. It aims to promote a lifelong approach to supporting people and their families and carers, focusing on prevention and early intervention and minimising inpatient admissions.
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- Learning disabilities
- Patient / family support
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Content ArticlePeople with a learning disability are more than twice as likely to die from avoidable causes than the rest of the population. Actor Tommy Jessop and BBC Panorama investigated some of the stories of families who say they were let down by their medical care.
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- Learning disabilities
- Healthcare
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Content ArticleAutistic patients trapped in mental health units tell their stories, revealing a system of poor treatment, abuse and long stretches inside with their symptoms only getting worse.
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- Autism
- Organisation / service factors
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Content ArticleCaring for people with learning disabilities in an acute hospital setting can be challenging, especially if that patient has transitioned from children’s services to adult services. The experience in children’s acute care differs to adult acute care; this difference in processes of care can cause great anxiety for the patient and their family and carers. The reasonable adjustments that were perhaps made and sustained in children’s services may now not exist. The purpose of this blog is to demonstrate the importance for services to be designed around patients’ needs with patients, families and carers. If we get this right, the quality of care given will be improved, patient satisfaction increases and, in turn, a reduction in patient harm. It is important to note that designing services around patients is not exclusive to learning disabilities; designing services with ALL patients at the centre with their involvement is crucial for trusts to provide safe care.
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- Learning disorders
- Patient
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Content Article
Patient Experience Library: Patient surveys tracker
Patient Safety Learning posted an article in Patient engagement
The Patient Experience Library's patient surveys tracker offers one-click access to the key patient experience datasets for every Trust in England.- Posted
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- Patient engagement
- Transparency
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Content ArticlePeople taking ownership of their health journey is hardly news. Long gone are the days when patients were passive players in their health experience. Today, technology engages, motivates, and empowers people to take control. Engaged patients are more likely to listen to preventive guidance, ask questions, and seek further information. The benefits for these patients—and for healthcare systems—are immense: improved health outcomes, reduced costs, and better care experiences for both patients and clinicians. But what role have such engaged patients played in transforming healthcare? And why is this important for the future? Kristin Molina, business leader for Philips Enterprise Care Collaboration, discusses this in an article for Patient Safety and Quality Healthcare (PSQH).
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- Patient engagement
- Collaboration
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Content ArticleThe Patient Information Forum (PIF) has launched an update to the UK’s only assessed quality mark for print and digital health and care information. The update places a greater emphasis on inclusion and reflects the huge evolution in health and care information since the PIF TICK was launched in 2020.
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- Communication
- Organisation / service factors
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Content ArticleEarlier this year The King’s Fund and The Nuffield Trust published the results of the 2021 British Social Attitudes survey, which asked members of the public about their views on health and care services. The results were stark, with unprecedented drops in satisfaction across the board. But can we conclude that there has been a fundamental rupture in the relationship between the NHS and the public?
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- Patient engagement
- Healthcare
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(and 1 more)
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Content ArticleAfter a decade of austerity, The NHS Long Term Plan was meant to be a turning point for healthcare. However, those plans have been severely disrupted by the coronavirus pandemic. New analysis from the Institute for Public Policy Research shows the scale of the damage done by the pandemic across several major health conditions. It recommends a package of six ambitious changes to ‘build back better’. These policies are designed to do three things. First, they intend to ensure the pandemic does not cause lasting damage to healthcare services for future generations. Second, they look to bring in areas – like social care and public health – that are not covered in The NHS Long Term Plan, but which COVID-19 has harshly reminded us are integral to healthcare. Third, they look to capture the innovations that occurred during the pandemic.
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Content ArticleAt present there is a single specialist service providing gender identity services for children and young people – the Gender Identity Development Service (GIDS) at the Tavistock and Portman NHS Foundation Trust. In recent years GIDS has experienced a significant increase in referrals which has contributed to long waiting lists and growing concern about how the NHS should most appropriately assess, diagnose and care for this population of children and young people. The Cass Review has submitted an interim report to NHS England, which sets out their work to date, what has been learnt so far and the approach going forward. The report does not set out final recommendations at this stage.
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- Children and Young People
- Health inequalities
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