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Found 1,295 results
  1. Content Article
    A new study by Staffordshire University shows that people who understand their ‘heart age’ are more likely to make healthy lifestyle changes. 50 preventable deaths from heart attack or stroke happen every day and Public Health England’s online Heart Age Test (HAT) allows users to compare their real age to the predicted age of their heart. The tool aims to provide early warning signs of cardiovascular disease (CVD) risk, encouraging members of the public to reduce their heart age through diet and exercise and to take up the offer of an NHS Health Check.
  2. Content Article
    This article in The Primary Care Companion for CNS Disorders looks at the impact of the doctor-patient relationship on patient outcomes. It highlights issues that can arise in this relationship, looks at their causes and suggests potential solutions.
  3. News Article
    Patients are starting to suffer because health and care workers are unable to purchase fuel. The fuel crisis is starting to have an effect on the care of vulnerable patients, community and mental health service providers have warned. Many petrol stations are running short of fuel as a result of panic buying, after the oil firm BP warned that it would have to close some of its petrol stations because of the lack of lorry drivers. Currently there is a shortage of about 100,000 HGV drivers. Crystal Oldman, chief executive for the Queen’s Nursing Institute, which represents community nurses, told the journal HSJ that the fuel shortage was already affecting them: “This potentially means nurses cannot get to the patients they need to if they are unable to access fuel. At the very least, it will mean more time searching for petrol stations that have a supply, taking valuable time from their working day and more unpaid overtime will be undertaken as nurses will always prioritise their patient care.” Patient transport has also been affected. A source at a patient transport provider in the West Midlands told HSJ that it had been “a bit of a nightmare”. The provider had had to turn down a request for a patient going to London because of the fuel shortage and because of climate protesters disrupting motorway transport: “Ultimately those patients are either at home and distressed carrying a big risk in the community or [accident and emergency] departments which [are not] the right settings.” Read the full article here Source: Future Care Capital
  4. Content Article
    This article from Healthwatch outlines the communications patients should expect from their healthcare provider while they are waiting for treatment. It also describes how healthcare staff should involve patients in shared decision-making about their care and communicate clearly, personally and transparently.
  5. News Article
    A TikTok user who went viral with a video of herself removing her implanted birth control device has prompted calls among sexual health experts for better monitoring of social media platforms. In a video which has gained over 178,000 likes, TikTok user Mikkie Gallagher is filmed performing a ‘DIY IUD removal’ wearing medical gloves, writing on top of the post: “A lot easier than I thought TBH,” and “Catch of the day: Mirena IUD, 2 inches”. An intrauterine device (IUD) is inserted into the uterus to prevent pregnancy and sometimes assist in relieving period pain. They usually need to be taken out every five to 10 years depending on the type. Women can choose when to have them removed. Family Planning Victoria CEO, Claire Vissenga, said she found it very concerning that “DIY could pass as healthcare or professional assistance”. “... it’s just a ridiculous thing to do. Removing an IUD potentially does physical damage, and could complicate contraception,” says Vissenga Family Planning medical director, Kathleen McNamee, said 80% of DIY IUD removals failed, leading to GP or emergency visits. “If the person dislodges the IUD in a failed attempt, it could no longer be effective as a contraceptive method and result in an unwanted pregnancy,” she said. Read full story Source: The Guardian, 24 September 2021
  6. News Article
    A coroner has raised concerns about how a family was allowed to bring a restricted item that contributed to a man's death into a mental health unit. Joshua Sahota, 25, died as a result of asphyxia and psychosis in Bury St Edmunds, Suffolk, on 9 September 2019. Suffolk coroner Nigel Parsley said Mr Sahota's relatives were not told the item they brought in when visiting was on a restricted list. The NHS trust which runs the unit said it had improved its internal processes. Mr Sahota, from Kennett in Cambridgeshire, was taken to the Wedgewood Unit on the West Suffolk Hospital site three weeks before his death as his mental health had declined. Insufficient staffing levels contributed to his death, an inquest jury at Suffolk Coroner's Court concluded. Other factors included insufficient observations and one-to-one processes, no clear and concise risk assessments, being slow to develop a care plan and the absence of a documented crisis plan. Read full story Source: BBC News, 21 September 2021
  7. Content Article
    Joshua Sahota died as a result of asphyxia and psychosis while a patient in Northgate Ward at Wedgewood House, operated and staffed by Norfolk and Suffolk NHS Foundation Trust. In his report, the Coroner raised patient safety concerns regarding how the trust communicates to relatives which items are restricted and not allowed to be brought into the ward. He raised concerns that family and friends of current inpatients may still inadvertently take a restricted item onto the ward unless changes are put in place.
  8. Content Article
    Many elective orthopaedic procedures were cancelled due to the Covid-19 pandemic and the number of patients on waiting lists for surgery is rising. This study looks at the disparities between inpatient and day-case orthopaedic waiting list numbers and the ‘hidden burden’ that exists due to reductions in elective secondary care referrals. The authors looked at elective procedures at a single District General Hospital in the UK between 1 April and 31 December 2020 and compared data with the same nine-month period from 2019. The study found: a 52.8% reduction in elective surgical workload in 2020 the total number of patients on waiting lists had risen by 30.1% in just 12 months inpatient waiting lists have risen by 73.2%, compared to a 1.6% rise in the day-case waiting list new patient referrals from primary care and therapy have reduced by 49.7%. The authors highlight the disparity between inpatient and day-case waiting lists and predict an influx of new referrals as the pandemic eases. They call for robust planning and allocation of adequate resources to deal with the backlog.
  9. Content Article
    'This is me' is a simple leaflet for anyone receiving professional care who is living with dementia or experiencing delirium or other communication difficulties. 'This is me' can be used to record details about a person who can't easily share information about themselves. For example, it can be used to record: a person’s cultural and family background important events, people and places from their life their preferences and routines.
  10. Content Article
    In this blog Patient Safety Learning marks World Patient Safety Day 2021. It sets out the scale of avoidable harm in healthcare, what needs to change to create a patient safe future and considers the theme of this year’s World Patient Safety Day, ‘Safe maternal and newborn care’.
  11. Content Article
    Healthcare organisations strive to improve patient care experiences. One way is to use one-on-one provider counselling (shadow coaching) to identify and target modifiable provider behaviours. Quigley et al. examined whether shadow coaching improves patient experience across 44 primary care practices in a large urban US health centre. They found that shadow coaching improved providers' overall performance and communication immediately after being coached. However, these gains disappeared after 2.5 years. Regularly planned shadow coaching "booster" sessions might maintain or even increase the improvement gained in patient experience scores, but research examining additional coaching and optimal implementation is needed.
  12. Content Article
    As part of a Patient Safety in Surgery Webinar Series held by Massachusetts General Hospital’s COMPASS (Center for Outcomes and Patient Safety in Surgery), Vivian Lee, president of Verily Health Platforms, shares strategies for leading quality improvement and change to work toward a healthcare system that provides better care, more efficiently and at a lower cost.
  13. News Article
    GP surgery staff are facing abuse from patients who are “angry and upset” that their blood test has been cancelled because of the NHS-wide chronic shortage of sample bottles. “Patients are angry when we ring them up and say, ‘Sorry we can’t do your blood test after all’. A lot of people are quite angry and concerned about their own health,” Dr David Wrigley, the deputy chair of council at the British Medical Association, said. “Patients are quite rightly upset and some get quite aggressive as well. They are worried because they don’t know what the implications of their cancelled test are for their health.” GP practices in England had begun cancelling appointments because the NHS’s main supplier could not deliver stocks as planned for one to two weeks because of “unforeseen road freight challenges”. NHS England has responded to the shortage of blood sample bottles by telling GPs to cancel all but clinically urgent blood tests and hospitals to cut back the tests they do by at least 25%. Read full story Source: The Guardian, 6 September 2021
  14. Content Article
    Patients for Patient Safety US (PFPS US) is a network of people and organisations aligned with the World Health Organization (WHO) and focused on making healthcare safe in the United States. It is led by people who have experienced medical error as a patient or in their families, and is committed to implementing the World Health Organization Global Patient Safety Action Plan in the USA.  Read their 'Stories That Impacted Change'
  15. Content Article
    This guide, developed by the charity Action Against Medical Accidents (AvMA), aims to provide support for people seeking legal advice about a possible clinical negligence claim. It is intended to provide information about what to expect from a first meeting with a lawyer and how to prepare for this.
  16. Content Article
    This article discusses what advocacy actually entails and what values it ought to embody. The paper considers whether advocates are necessary since not only can they be dangerously paternalistic, but the salutary values advocacy embodies are already part of good professional health care.
  17. Content Article
    This article by Dean K Wright describes the definition of 'advocate' and discusses how a doctor can best support their patient, particularly in regards to advocating for their patients rights and/or needs and in cases of child abuse and barriers to effective patient care.
  18. Content Article
    This research article aimed to provide Registered Nurses with a description of patient advocacy in the clinical setting. Through a series of semi-structured interviews with 25 participants, the results of this study found the nurses had an adequate understanding of patient advocacy and were willing to advocate for patients, describing patient advocacy as promoting patient safety and quality care.
  19. Content Article
    A blog highlighting the barriers in healthcare faced by patients due to the colour of their skin.
  20. Content Article
    This toolkit has been developed to inform improvement work in inpatient and residential settings which support people with dementia. It provides guidance on the steps needed to organise and manage an improvement project, how to utilise the experiences of people affected by dementia to develop improvement priorities and shares work and interventions by teams across Scotland.
  21. Content Article
    This video, produced in conjunction with Royds Withy King Solicitors, provides a quick overview of AvMA’s services and how volunteers help them to deliver the vital support people need after experiencing medical harm.
  22. Content Article
    This collection of chapters surrounding the Biopsychosocial Model covers the background to the model and it's implications in areas of medicine as diverse as gastrointestinal diseases and mental health disorders.
  23. Content Article
    This article, published in Social and Personality Psychology Compass, looks at the biopsychosocial model as a dynamic system of multiple contextual factors that influence health.
  24. Content Article
    This rapid response to the article 'What is a good doctor and how can we make one?', published on the BMJ website, discusses the background to the Biopsychosocial Model and it's implications in clinical practice today. The author highlights the importance of taking psychosocial factors into consideration, such as diet or loneliness, in order to improve individualised patient treatment.
  25. Content Article
    An article outlining the significance of needlestick injuries - their risks to healthcare workers, their cost, and the importance of prevention.
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