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Found 132 results
  1. News Article
    A US hospital has rejected a patient for a heart transplant at least in part because he is not vaccinated against COVID-19. DJ Ferguson, 31, is in dire need of a new heart, but Brigham and Women's Hospital in Boston took him off their list, said his father, David. He said the Covid vaccine goes against his son's "basic principles, he doesn't believe in it". The hospital said it was following policy. Brigham and Women's Hospital told the BBC in a statement: "Given the shortage of available organs, we do everything we can to ensure that a patient who receives a transplanted organ has the greatest chance of survival." A spokesman said the hospital requires "the Covid-19 vaccine, and lifestyle behaviours for transplant candidates to create both the best chance for a successful operation and to optimise the patient's survival after transplantation, given that their immune system is drastically suppressed". The hospital's carefully worded statement may suggest other factors lie beyond the patient's unvaccinated status for his ineligibility, but it refused to discuss specifics, citing patient privacy. Dr Arthur Caplan, head of medical ethics at NYU Grossman School of Medicine, told CBS News that after any organ transplant a patient's immune system is all but shut down and even a common cold can prove fatal. "The organs are scarce, we are not going to distribute them to someone who has a poor chance of living when others who are vaccinated have a better chance post-surgery of surviving," said Dr Caplan. Read full story Source: BBC News, 26 January 2022
  2. Content Article
    Podcast from the NHS England and NHS Improvement National Patient Safety Team, where Tracey Herlihey, head of patient safety incident response policy, and Lauren Mosley, head of patient safety implementation, talk about the Patient Safety Incident Response Framework (PSIRF) which will be launched in Spring 2022. The framework is a key component of the NHS Patient Safety Strategy, and will outline how NHS providers should respond to patient safety incidents and how and when a patient safety investigation should be conducted. Once implementation is completed it will replace the current Serious Incident Framework. The podcast gives an overview of PSIRF and its key features, talks about findings from work with early adopters over the past two years to pilot an introductory version of the framework, and explains what providers can do now to prepare for its launch in the Spring.
  3. Content Article
    The emergence of the omicron variant has raised concerns that the pandemic is not yet over. In this BMJ opinion piece, William et al. outline four key lessons that governments need to learn from to protect against future pandemics
  4. Content Article
    A new study developed by the European Observatory on Health Systems and Policies, the WHO Regional Office for Europe and the European Commission draws out lessons for strengthening resilience to future health threats. The Health systems resilience during COVID-19: Lessons for building back better study gathers the evidence on how countries have managed (or not managed) to re-engineer how they work, the ways in which they utilise their resources and the methods they use to face and counter the pressures exerted by both COVID and non-COVID challenges.
  5. Content Article
    The Covid-19 pandemic has precipitated a huge increase in the use of digital technology in healthcare. This is a welcome development following years of slow progress in embedding digital technologies into England’s NHS. This Nuffield Trust report explores the approach that other countries have taken to advance digital health. It asks four key research questions: How have policy-makers in different countries defined the objectives of digitalisation within healthcare? What policy approaches have been used in different countries to support and promote digitalisation in healthcare? What worked well, what were the challenges and how were they overcome? What are the implications for NHS digital health policy?
  6. Content Article
    This World Health Organization (WHO) policy brief takes stock of how digital health tools have been used during the COVID-19 pandemic, in order to review what has happened, assess how uptake and use of these tools has been facilitated, identify issues that are emerging, and learn lessons for the longer term to support the sustained use of digital health tools.
  7. Content Article
    When the history of the COVID-19 pandemic is written, it is likely to show that the mental models held by scientists sometimes facilitated their thinking, thereby leading to lives saved, and at other times constrained their thinking, thereby leading to lives lost. This paper from Trisha Greenhalgh explores some competing mental models of how infectious diseases spread and shows how these models influenced the scientific process and the kinds of facts that were generated, legitimised and used to support policy.
  8. Content Article
    Mandatory and voluntary safety reporting policies are an extremely important part of providing guidance for safety reporting in aviation safety management systems (SMS). This blog highlights the purpose of safety reporting policies, how to train employees on voluntary vs mandatory reporting, and how to encourage mandatory and voluntary safety reporting. Although written for the aviation industry, many of the principles can be applied to healthcare.
  9. Event
    The NHS Long Term Plan 2021 conference will set out the main commitments in the plan and provide a view of what they might mean, highlighting the opportunities and challenges for the health and care system as it moves to put the plan into practice post COVID-19. This conference will provide delegates with the opportunity to hear from key speakers on the NHS’s priorities for care quality and outcomes improvement for the decade ahead. The programme will inform and educate delegates on subjects that affect their everyday life all of which will help contribute both to patients and the UK economy. Confirmed speakers include: Matthew Taylor - Chief Executive, NHS Confederation Chris Hopson - Chief Executive, NHS Providers Professor Matthew Cripps - Director of Sustainable Healthcare, NHS England & Improvement Lisa Hollins - Director of Innovation Delivery, NHSX Further information and registration 10 fully funded (no charge) places are currently available exclusively to members of the hub and are limited on a first come first served basis. Email info@pslhub.org for a code.
  10. News Article
    Oxford writer Wayne Brown describes how he tried donating blood in the middle of the pandemic last year but was turned away due to his same-sex marriage of 14 years. However, since the ban has been lifted, he has already booked his appointment to donate. Wayne Brown discusses how since the ban has been lifted, it may now mean more progress and positive changes are happening for gay men. Read full story. Source: BBC News, 13 June 2021
  11. News Article
    More gay and bisexual men will now be allowed to donate blood after rule change. The new rules which came into effect on World Blood Day mean that men who have sex with other men will now be able to donate blood without being asked about their sexual behaviours. Under the new rules, anyone who has had the same sexual partner for the past three months will be eligible to donate blood, but it will also be based on an individual case by case basis. However, the rules state that anyone who has had anal sex or multiple partners, been exposed to an STI, used pre-exposure prophylaxis (PrEP) or post-exposure prophylaxis (PEP) within the last three months will not be eligible to donate. Read full story Source: Evening Standard, 14 June 2021
  12. News Article
    The government has confirmed its commitment to bring in new health legislation during this Parliament, but social care reform has again been ‘kicked into the long grass’. Today’s Queen’s Speech confirmed that planned, radical changes to the Health and Social Care Bill 2012 will be laid before Parliament this year. The changes, first outlined in the government’s proposals this February, will put integrated care systems on a statutory footing, dissolve clinical commissioning groups, water down the internal market within the NHS and increase the powers the health secretary has over NHS England and the service. Today’s Queen’s Speech said these changes meant “patients will receive more tailored and preventative care, closer to home [and will] empower the NHS to innovate and embrace technology”. However, it did not add any further information to the government’s already stated plans to “bring forward proposals in 2021” for social care reform. The 2019 Queen’s Speech, the first delivered during Boris Johnson’s tenure as prime minister, promised to bring in ”legislation for long-term social care reform in England”. To date, the government has failed to act on this promise. Read full story Source: HSJ, 11 May 2021
  13. Content Article
    The King's Fund report is intended primarily for hospital board members, clinicians and managers in hospitals. We hope that it will contribute to and provide support for their continuous efforts to improve patients’ experience, and that it will also be of interest to patients and their representatives, commissioners and policy-makers. The purpose of the report is to consider how we can improve the patients’ experience of care. The report introduces current debates and dilemmas in relation to patients’ experience of care in hospital, presents our view of the factors that shape that experience, and assesses the evidence to support various interventions that are designed to tackle the problems.
  14. Content Article
    The COVID-19 pandemic has profoundly impacted the country’s health systems and diminished its capability to provide safe and effective healthcare. This article from Sharda Narwal and Susmit Jain attempts to review patients safety issues during COVID-19 pandemic in India, and derive lessons from national and international experiences to inform policy actions for building a ‘resilient health system’
  15. Content Article
    In this report, the government sets out reforms to the public health system in England and invite you to share your insights and experience to help them with the next stages of our work. Your feedback will help to shape the future of the public health system. This update focuses on structural reforms, which are a vital enabler of delivering better and more equal outcomes on public health, but they are just one aspect of public health reform. Its focus is the public health system for England, but chapter two highlights the interaction with important UK-wide elements of our health protection response. A further update will be published later in 2021 with final details on design, structure and implementation, and it will also set out government's plans for the policies, delivery and outcomes they want this reformed system to drive and deliver.
  16. Content Article
    Government plan to prevent, mitigate and respond to the mental health impacts of the pandemic during 2021 to 2022.
  17. Content Article
    The purpose of this guide from NHS Education for Scotland is to help people working in the health and social care ecosystem capture valuable practice and improvements made during their response to COVID-19. The aim is to contribute to organisational change at a policy, strategic and operational level. If left too late, there is a real danger that positive change is not documented and will be lost as the health system emerges from the pandemic. 
  18. Content Article
    NHSX recently launched a brand new information governance portal providing a 'one-stop shop' for NHS policies and guidance. The new portal covers everything from GDPR in research to record management. But even with the new portal, navigating NHS guidance on data isn't easy. This article in Global Compliance News picks out six essential items to have on your radar if your organisation accesses or uses NHS data.
  19. Content Article
    This World Health Organization (WHO) policy brief highlights areas where policy-makers can take action to meet the challenge of post-Covid conditions based on what is currently known. It addresses the need for multidisciplinary, multispecialty approaches to assessment and management; development of new care pathways and contextually appropriate guidelines for health professionals; and the creation of appropriate services, including rehabilitation and online support tools.
  20. Content Article
    A framework from the Department of Health and Social Care (DHSC) setting out a coherent, national vision on how the UK will improve the lives of those living with rare diseases.  The framework outlines 4 key national priorities: helping patients get a final diagnosis faster increasing awareness among healthcare professionals better co-ordination of care improving access to specialist care, treatment and drugs.
  21. Content Article
    NHSX has launched a brand new information governance portal providing a 'one-stop shop' for NHS policies and guidance.
  22. Content Article
    The Centre for Perioperative Care (CPOC) has started work on the UK’s first ever Green Paper on perioperative care. 
  23. Content Article
    The Health Foundation policy tracker provides a description and timeline of national policy and health system responses to COVID-19 in England in 2020. The full tracker includes data on what changes have been introduced, when, why, and by whom – as well as how these changes have been communicated by policymakers. We track policy changes in five areas – from health and care system changes to wider social and economic policy.
  24. Content Article
    NHS Solent share their policy on healthcare workers screening and immunisation. The primary purpose of this policy is to reduce the risk of transmission of infection (as far as reasonably practical) from an infected healthcare worker-to-patient. The main known risks of infection through bloodborne virus in the clinical setting are from hepatitis B, hepatitis C and HIV. This measure is not intended to prevent those healthcare workers from working in the NHS but rather to restrict them from working in clinical areas where their infection may pose a risk to patients in their care and by early diagnosis; allows them to manage their own health.
  25. Event
    until
    More than 1,900 delegates have attended Health and care explained, ranging from chief executives of charities to NHS leaders, students and representatives from government bodies. Returning for its ninth run, The King Fund's conference gives you the opportunity to interact with our policy experts, who will guide you through the latest health and social care data and explain how the system in England really works. You will hear balanced and honest views about the pressures and opportunities facing the system in 2021. Register
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