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Showing results for tags 'Womens health'.
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Content ArticleLockdown has been a seismic shock for every family and community. Sadly, the voices of the hardest hit have been heard the least. This report sets about to change this by exploring pandemic and lockdown reflections from a diverse group of expectant and new parents during the critical first months and years of their babies’ development. Charities Best Beginnings, Home-Start UK and Parent-Infant Foundation were alarmed that the voices of parents with new babies have been absent from key pandemic responses. As a result, they worked with Critical Research to survey 5,000 new and expectant parents on their lockdown experiences and found a mixed picture, shining a light on huge disparities between different families and communities.
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Content ArticleThis was an Adjournment Debate from the House of Commons on the 24 September 2020 on NHS Hysteroscopy Treatment tabled by Lyn Brown MP.
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Content ArticleAt the First Do No Harm All Party Parliamentary Group (APPG) meeting on 26 January 2021 with the Minister for Patient Safety, Nadine Dorries MP, attendees asked a large number of questions, not all of which could be answered by the Minister due to time constraints. The unanswered questions were submitted to the Minister’s office at the Department for Health and Social Care for a written response. The Department has now provided answers.
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Transvaginal Mesh Case Record Review
PatientSafetyLearning Team posted an article in Women's health
On this site you will find information about the Transvaginal Mesh Case Record Review. This Review has been commissioned by the Scottish Government to address concerns raised by women about whether their case records accurately reflect the treatment they have received, specifically in relation to full and partial removal of mesh.- Posted
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Content ArticleIn this blog Patient Safety Learning reflects on responses received from Robin Swann MLA, Minister of Health (Northern Ireland), Jeane Freeman MSP, Cabinet Secretary for Health and Sport (Scotland) and Vaughan Gething MS, Minister for Health and Social Services (Wales), regarding concerns about painful hysteroscopy procedures in the NHS.
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Content ArticleThis is a video recording of the All Party Parliamentary Group (APPG) for First Do No Harm meeting with Nadine Dorries MP, the Minister for Patient Safety, Suicide Prevention and Mental Health. The meeting took place on 26 January 2021 and is chaired by Baroness Cumberlege who is the Co-Chair of the APPG. The APPG was set up to raise awareness of and build support for the recommendations in 'First Do No Harm', the report of the Independent Medicines and Medical Devices Safety Review, and to ensure the implementation of the recommendations by the UK government and others.
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Through the hysteroscope: Reflections of a gynaecologist
SairaS posted an article in Women's health
At Patient Safety Learning, we’ve been working with others to understand the issues surrounding painful hysteroscopies. In this interview, we talk to Obstetrics and Gynaecology consultant, Saira Sundar, about the process. She offers her clinical insight and highlights some of the challenges involved when it comes to managing pain during hysteroscopies. Saira also offers advice to colleagues and patients seeking to reduce anxiety and improve the patient experience.- Posted
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Content ArticleIn this written statement to Parliament, the Minister for Patient Safety, Suicide Prevention and Mental Health, Nadine Dorries, gives an update on the government’s response to the recommendations of the Independent Medicines and Medical Devices Safety (IMMDS) Review, sometimes referred to as the Cumberlege Review. Nadine Dorries concludes: "The report of the IMMDS Review powerfully demonstrates the importance of hearing the patient voice in patient safety matters. The actions outlined here demonstrate the government’s commitment to learning from this report, and will support vital work already underway to hear the voice of the patient as part of the NHS Patient Safety Strategy. We currently plan to respond further to the report of the IMMDS Review during 2021."
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Content ArticleWith the UK's official COVID-19 death toll exceeding 60 000, and data from the Office for National Statistics indicating excess deaths of more than 70 000, the succession of grim milestones in 2020 has shown little sign of abating, despite optimism around COVID-19 vaccination. Every single COVID-19 death is a family devastated by loss. The Covid-19 Bereaved Families for Justice, a group of over 2000 people who have lost a loved one to COVID-19 in the UK, share their stories in this Lancet commentary, and are campaigning for lessons to be learned as quickly as possible to save lives as the pandemic continues and ahead of the wide-scale roll-out of COVID-19 vaccines across the UK. They call for an immediate public inquiry with a rapid review phase.
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Content ArticleWe’ve come to the final instalment of our 2020 blog series, where we’ve reflected on key patient safety issues we’ve seen this year and our work in those areas. First, our Chief Executive, Helen Hughes, introduced the series, giving an overview of the year. We then looked at: The impact of the COVID19 pandemic on patient safety Advice and support for people living with Long COVID Painful hysteroscopies Staff safety. Lastly, we turn our attention to one of the most significant reports we’ve responded to this year, First Do No Harm – also known as the Cumberlege Review – by the Independent Medicines and Medical Devices Safety Review.
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Content ArticleThis month, we’ve been looking back over 2020 and highlighting some of the key areas of health and care that Patient Safety Learning has worked in this year. First, Chief Executive, Helen Hughes, gave an overview, detailing some of the main ways we’ve been achieving our aims as an organisation. Following that, we looked at the impact of the COVID-19 pandemic on patient safety, and, earlier this week, we focused on advice and support for people living with Long COVID. In this blog, Patient Safety Learning reflect on the work we’ve been doing to highlight serious patient safety concerns relating to hysteroscopy procedures in the NHS and how we’ve been making the case for change.
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Content ArticleLaura Anne Jones MS (Member of the Senedd) tabled a formal written question concerning the implementation of the findings of the Cumberlege Review in Wales. This is the formal response from the Minister for Health and Social Services, Vaughan Gething MS.
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The normalisation of women’s pain
LiSaRa posted an article in Women's health
In this wonderfully personal reflection, Junior Doctor and Clinical Fellow, Lisa Rampersad, argues that women are taught to apologise for their pain from an early age. Lisa draws on her own experiences, including those as a patient herself, to highlight a need for a better understanding of the female anatomy. She concludes by sharing her own approach as a clinician, encouraging others to listen and believe their patients when they talk about pain.- Posted
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Content ArticleThis is a guest post for the Hysterical Women website, by Kath Sansom, founder of the Sling the Mesh campaign. Content warning: mention of self-harm.
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Content ArticleIn this short video produced by Endometriosis Explained, retired gynaecologist, MJ Quinn, talks about the neuropathic causes of painful hysteroscopy. This includes seven recommendations for how to avoid severe pain outpatient hysteroscopy.
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Content ArticleThe All Party Parliamentary Group on Sexual and Reproductive Health (APPG SRH) opened the Inquiry into Access to Contraception in 2019, in response to reports of women being unable to access contraception in a way that meets their needs. The Inquiry's report, Women's Lives, Women's Rights: Strengthening Access to Contraception Beyond the Pandemic has now been published and looks specifically at the following key areas: Fragmented commissioning Funding Workforce Data collection Education and information Access for marginalised groups Opportunities to improve contraceptive provision.
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Content ArticleThe aim of this review, published in Archives of Gynaecology and Obstetrics, is to provide an overview of the literature about the perception and management of anxiety and pain in women undergoing an office hysteroscopic procedure.
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Breastfeeding and medication
PatientSafetyLearning Team posted an article in Women's health
This website has been developed by Wendy Jones BSc, MSc, PhD, MRPharmS, a Community Pharmacist for over 40 years. This website is designed to provide information and support for mothers and healthcare professionals struggling to balance the benefits of breastfeeding with the perceived risk of exposing the baby to medication through his/her mother’s breastmilk.The information provided is based upon Wendy's many years experience gained as a pharmacist and from running the BfN national Drugs in Breastmilk Help-line.- Posted
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Content ArticleRefinery29 UK has published a series of articles focusing on the gender health gap: Uncharted Bodies: Exploring The Gender Health Gap. They looked at five distinct areas in reproductive and gynaecological health where a lack of research and therefore data is directly affecting women’s health: endometriosishormonal contraception and how it affects women’s brainspolycystic ovary syndrome (PCOS)premenstrual dysphoric disorder (PMDD) vaginismus. Follow the link below to find our more.
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Content ArticleA framework has been developed by the Royal College of Obstetricians and Gynaecologists (RCOG), Royal College of Midwives and the Society and College of Radiographers, in partnership with NHS England and NHS Improvement, to support maternity services with the local reintroduction of hospital visitors and individuals accompanying women to appointments. This framework has been designed to assist NHS trusts to reintroduce access for partners, visitors and other supporters of pregnant women in English maternity services. It applies to inpatient and outpatient settings. Reintroducing visits is challenging during a pandemic, and the priority must be the safety of all service users (including pregnant women), staff and visitors.
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Content ArticleThis was a debate from the Scottish Parliament on the 8 September 2020 concerning the recommendations in the recently published First Do No Harm report by the Independent Medicines and Medical Devices Safety Review, chaired by Baroness Cumberlege (also known as the Cumberlege Review). The debate centred on a motion put forward by Jeane Freeman MSP, Cabinet Secretary for Health and Sport, which read as follows: That the Parliament welcomes the recommendations made by Baroness Cumberlege in her report on the independent medicines and medical devices safety review; acknowledges the Scottish Government's apology to women and families affected by Primodos, sodium valproate and transvaginal mesh; welcomes the Scottish Government’s commitment to establish a Patient Safety Commissioner, and notes the actions taken by the Scottish Government to offer improved services for women who have suffered complications as a result of transvaginal mesh.
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Content ArticleThis health seminar focuses on one of the most taboo issues in women’s health, incontinence. An estimated 7 million women suffer urinary incontinence which can affect all areas of life, yet it is rarely spoken about and regarded as an issue that only affects older women. Wellbeing of Women talk to Luce Brett, author of PMSL: Or How I Literally Pissed Myself Laughing and Survived the Last Taboo to Tell the Tale and Elaine Miller a women’s health physiotherapist, for what is a hilariously open but also vital conversation about living with incontinence, why we shouldn’t have to accept it and what we can do.
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Content ArticleThis Heathcare Huddle video focuses on key themes that came out of the First Do No Harm report. You can watch it in two parts or as one full video. PART ONE (with Darren Thorne, Managing Director of Facere Melius) - Theme 1: ‘No-one is listening’ – The patient voice dismissed - Theme 2: ‘I’ll never forgive myself’ – Parents living with guilt - Theme 3: ‘I was never told’ – the failure of informed consent PART 2 - Theme 4: Redress – ‘We want justice’ - Theme 5: ‘We do not know who to complain to’ – Complaints - Theme 6: Duty of Candour – ‘preventing future errors’ - Theme 7: Conflicts of interest – ‘we deserve to know’.
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Content ArticleIn this BMJ Opinion article, Helen McKeown talks asks why the menopause is still a taboo topic when it comes to the well being of healthcare colleagues and argues more could be done to help staff.
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Content ArticleIn this editorial for the British Medical Journal, Helen Haskell summarises the findings and recommendations of the Cumberlege Review, First Do No Harm. Helen argues that while the report has the potential to be a powerful tool for change in and beyond the UK, patients and families now need to see evidence of action.
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- Womens health
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