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9 Ekim 2016 Pazar

Police say they are becoming emergency mental health services

Police say they are being relied on as an emergency mental health service and that cuts in psychiatric provision are probably to blame, the Guardian has learned.


Officers point to an increase of more than 50% in a decade in the use of powers to detain people under section 136 of the Mental Health Act. It allows police to remove someone from a public place and take them to a place of safety.


On Monday police chiefs begin new initiatives to help officers cope with the mental health crisis being played out on Britain’s streets. Alex Marshall, head of the College of Policing, said: “There is a real risk the high number of cases that frontline police deal with is because the police are stepping in where other agencies would have provided the support.”


Police suspect a dramatic increase in their use of emergency powers to deal with people suffering a mental health crisis is because of cuts to community psychiatric care. The number of instances of section 136 powers being used increased to 28,271 last year, up from 17,417 in 2005-06.


Marshall said: “This is a real live issue in all parts of the country. People in a mental health crisis should receive support, whatever time of day or night, from a properly trained mental health professional.”


Section 136 is used, for instance, in cases where officers have talked someone down from jumping from a bridge or on to a train line, or have found someone who is distressed or agitated in the street.


The lead on mental health issues for the College of Policing, Insp Michael Brown, told the Guardian: “Police are relied on as an emergency crisis service more now than previously. The police are using the power more. This may be attributable to some areas not having enough availability to care for people in the community, as opposed to in mental health hospitals and units.”


Support for the police view came from a study last week (pdf) from the university of Manchester showing that suicide rates were higher for those being cared for in the community than in mental health units.


In the last year 200 people took their lives while being cared for in the community and experts say community mental health crisis teams are under too much pressure.


Brown said some of the apparent increase in use of the emergency mental health powers could be because of better reporting but the majority is because of an increase in demand: “For lots of other reasons, a 10,000 increase in a decade [of section 136 use] is almost certainly because of a greater number of incidents police are attending,” he said.


On Monday the College of Policing launches guidelines aimed at getting police to avoid using force when having to deal with those they believe may be suffering from acute mental health problems. Some cases have ended in deaths, with families left grieving and police under investigation. Marshall said: “The officer dealing with an emergency very rarely knows the history of the person standing in front of them.”


Police will get a minimum of two days of training on mental health issues, with some officers getting more.


The college’s new guidance urges officers to avoid using force. “Failure to listen and actively engage in dialogue to draw out an explanation for apparently aggressive or odd behaviour represents a missed opportunity to de-escalate and resolve a situation informally before arrest and restraint may be necessary. An individual who is frightened, confused or injured may appear to be experiencing mental illness, but this should not be assumed before the subject has had a good opportunity to explain what is going on.”


The increased use of section 136 powers by police has happened despite several forces sharply reducing their use of the power because of street triage schemes, in which mental health experts go to patients and assess them, thus avoiding police having to detain them.


As well as government funding, police have put greater effort towards reducing the number of mentally ill people being held in cells because health services do not have beds for them. That initiative has been successful, although there are sharp local variations, probably due to local health service capacity.


In the Avon and Somerset force area one in six people detained because of concerns about their mental health spend time in a cell. In Merseyside the figure is zero.


Last week it emerged that a police chief is threatening to take legal action over his force having to cover the gaps in mental health services. Shaun Sawyer, the chief constable of Devon and Cornwall, threatened to sue his local NHS trusts over a lack of mental health beds. He said he would no longer tolerate a practice he regards as unlawful.


In one case a mentally ill victim of sexual assault had to be held in a police cell as no bed was available in a hospital, the Exeter Express and Echo reported.


In the UK, the Samaritans can be contacted on 116 123. In the US, the National Suicide Prevention Hotline is 1-800-273-8255. In Australia, the crisis support service Lifeline is on 13 11 14.



Police say they are becoming emergency mental health services

29 Ağustos 2016 Pazartesi

I haven’t had sex with my wife for eight years and I’m becoming obsessed

My wife has MS and is registered blind. I cannot physically connect with her. I recently saw a sexual counsellor and he told me to masturbate, but I feel guilty when I do this. We haven’t had sex for eight years, but I have normal urges. I also feel that, because I cannot physically love her, it may be that our relationship is spent. I obsess about sex to the extent that it is seriously affecting me.


Be kinder with yourself. Desperation and despair is no way to live. You are only human, and you need to find a way to fulfil your needs. If the idea of masturbation bothers you intellectually, remember that moderate masturbation is considered by most leaders in the field of sexual science and therapy to be normative, healthy and entirely acceptable. Clearly, your quality of life suffers when you are unable to achieve some physical pleasure and release. You have inherited a position of caring, and this change in your relationship is a form of loss that often leads to depression. Carers need to care for themselves, too. Without being able to maintain your own physical and psychological health, you cannot be helpful to your wife. Exercise, and try meditation or yoga to ease stress and reduce obsessions. Try to find an activity or sport that helps you connect socially with others. Above all, do whatever you can to avoid the underlying resentment that can poison a relationship.


Pamela Stephenson Connolly is a US-based psychotherapist specialising in sexual disorders.


If you would like advice from Pamela Stephenson Connolly on sexual matters, send us a brief description of your concerns to private.lives@theguardian.com (please don’t send attachments). Each week, Pamela chooses one problem to answer, which will be published online and in print. She regrets that she cannot enter into personal correspondence.



I haven’t had sex with my wife for eight years and I’m becoming obsessed

15 Haziran 2014 Pazar

Young children can be "damaged" by becoming shared between parents, youngster expert claims


Fathers’ rights groups have branded the feedback manufactured by Penelope Leach, one particular of Britain’s major parenting authorities, “worrying” and towards widespread sense.




Ms Leach, a former president of the National Childminding Association who has written a amount of books about caring for youngsters, claims making it possible for underneath fives to remain with their fathers produces “unhealthy attachment troubles.”




She also claims in her most recent guide, Loved ones Breakdown, that there was “undisputed evidence” that a time period of separation from their mother can adversely influence a child’s brain improvement.




She argues that “When individuals say that it is ‘only fair’ for a father and mom to share their 5-yr-outdated daughter on alternate weeks, they imply it is honest to the adults – who see her as a possession and her presence as their right – not that it is fair to the youngster.”




She also mentioned when attorneys bid for their consumer to have overnight accessibility with their youthful youngsters they are ignoring proof about the distressing and damaging affect on the kid.


Leach said the rights of the child must constantly outweigh those of the mother and father and extra: “It can be damaging to the child to divide time equally amongst the mother and father.”


Ian Maxwell, from Households Want Fathers, told the Independent on Sunday that society had moved on from traditional attachment theory when bonds amongst mother and little one had been observed as the strongest.


He added: “The bond between fathers and youngsters is just as essential and we would query the evidence Ms Leach is citing for the primacy of the maternal bond.”


He explained her argument did not accord with widespread sense was described her claims as “worrying.”


Leach has previously drawn criticism for her earlier bestselling guide, Your Little one &amp Little one: From Birth to Age 5, published. In this she claimed only mothers could care correctly for their children.


She has also attracted controversy soon after she claimed scientific evidence showed that leaving a infant to cry could have an effect on the improvement of its brain and make it susceptible to nervousness in later life.




Young children can be "damaged" by becoming shared between parents, youngster expert claims

12 Haziran 2014 Perşembe

Overtime becoming a truth of lifestyle for United kingdom workers


Too significantly operate was given as the primary purpose for doing overtime, with 40pc citing it, even though 20pc stated they stayed late simply because of stress from colleagues, and 11pc remained in the office due to the fact they have been afraid they may well shed their task if they didn’t clock up extra hours.




“It’s regarding to see so several people operating added hours due to pressures in their workplace,” mentioned Dr Mark Winwood, the insurer’s director of psychological solutions. “If a organization encourages a culture of prolonged hrs the place workers really feel they require to keep late, they may possibly be carrying out themselves a disservice.




“Protracted doing work hrs can dent an employee’s productivity and even lead to burnout. This is an issue employers would be sensible to tackle.”


He warned that employers also have a legal duty of care to safeguard the health and nicely-currently being of their staff and consequently must guarantee that they have a clear policy on overtime and make positive employees adhere to it.


“[Employers] should also invest in making certain that workers know what support providers are obtainable to assist them if they are struggling to control the pressures in their lives, regardless of whether at work or at house – for example, confidential counselling helplines,” explained Dr Winwood. “If not, they may discover themselves on the obtaining end of a work-relevant personal injury claim and/or up ahead of an employment tribunal.


“Overtime is as well usually worn as a badge of honour and observed by employees as a requirement for success. Senior management has a critical part to play in demanding this broadly held view and, by demonstrating robust leadership, can help to foster a workplace culture where workers are taken care of reasonably and better emphasis is placed on efficient functionality management rather than on just getting observed to be placing in lengthy hours.”


The study of 2,000 personnel also identified that less than half of individuals carrying out overtime get paid for it and that one particular in 10 employees perform via their lunch.


Job vacancies and careers tips at Telegraph Jobs




Overtime becoming a truth of lifestyle for United kingdom workers

26 Mayıs 2014 Pazartesi

Medical doctor, 29, died of cancer following becoming informed she was as well young to have disease

Rob Newton, her brother, is now attempting to increase awareness of the ailment and how it can influence younger men and women.


He informed the Everyday Mail: “When she was diagnosed with a tumour, it was devastating but equally frustrating that we hadn’t recognized sooner.”


He said his sister was positive about her issue and needed to inform other youthful people about the hazards. She also volunteered to be a case examine for Bowel Cancer United kingdom in a presentation at the Homes of Parliament.


He extra: “It was a huge shock when we found it was terminal.


“But throughout it all Suzanne was brilliant and upbeat.”


Mr Newton, thirty, is undertaking a entertaining run to raise income for the Globe Cancer Investigation Fund.


On his justgiving page, Mr Newton wrote: “In 2012, my sister Suzanne, started out to have negative abdomen pains and other ailments. The medical doctors refused to believe she had bowel cancer due to the fact she was as well younger, even so in November 2012 she was rushed to A&ampE the place a cancerous tumor was removed, and her fight to get greater started.”


Dr Gould died on March 18. She was married to Dr Simon Gould, a lecturer.


The Kingston University technician, from Dorking in Surrey, invested months in the Royal Marsden Hospital in Sutton exactly where she endured chemotherapy and radiotherapy.


She was also treated in Medway Hospital and ultimately cared for in St Catherine’s Hospice in Crawley.



Medical doctor, 29, died of cancer following becoming informed she was as well young to have disease

17 Mayıs 2014 Cumartesi

The tough inquiries becoming faced by today"s professional-choicers | Eva Wiseman

Pro-Choice supporters hold placards

Pro-Decision supporters hold placards. Photograph: Peter Muhly/AFP/Getty Photographs




What does it indicate to be professional-selection? What does it suggest, nowadays, almost 50 years after the Abortion Act, when we say we help the correct of a lady to make her own decision about whether she wants to go through with a pregnancy? I request because, more and more, even amongst those who say they are pro-option, individuals who tut at the protestors outdoors Marie Stopes clinics, people who might have had abortions themselves, there would seem to be some confusion.


When, at the end of April, escort, aspiring glamour model and mom-of-two Josie Cunningham informed the Sunday Mirror she was organizing an abortion to guarantee her area on Massive Brother, there was mild uproar. The earliest response was from Mirror readers, 93% of whom said they’d boycott Huge Brother if she appeared on the present, but the anger – and bloggers, when they weren’t promising to pray for her, have been angry – swiftly spread. She received death threats somebody explained they’d throw acid in her encounter she was invited to commit suicide. These alongside disgusted tweets from large-profile medical doctors and liberal commentators. Cunningham altered her mind. “I have not heard from BB bosses, but I am not bothered – I have received much better possibilities lined up. I’m in talks for my own present. It really is going to be a cross among Keeping Up with the Kardashians and Jeremy Kyle.”


A week or so later on, a YouTube video of an abortion went viral. The clip, by 25-yr-outdated abortion counsellor Emily Letts, focuses on her encounter as she breathes, calmly, by means of the brief method. At the finish she says: “I come to feel excellent.” “We speak about abortion so a lot,” she explained, “and however no a single actually understands what it in fact looks like.” It has been viewed over one.5m occasions. “Females are like: ‘Of course everybody feels bad about this of program everyone feels guilty’, as if it’s a provided,” she says in the video. “I will not come to feel like a bad person, I don’t come to feel sad… I knew that what I was going to do was proper, because it was correct for me.”


Once more, the reaction has been fierce – the two from anti-abortion protestors (some responded to Letts’s video with their burning images of her the messages were so aggressive that YouTube disabled remarks) and from those who are passionately professional-selection. The Telegraph‘s Dina Rickman wrote: “I’m not denying there are many issues we want to demystify – I just never believe people conversations must involve YouTube. For me, the video displays there are some taboos we just do not want to break.”


For me? The reactions have illustrated a widening gap amongst the concept of becoming pro-option and the true, day-to-day “Oh shit… oh properly” of abortion. The actual bus to the clinic, the actual flicking by way of Appear magazine, the true tuna sandwich afterwards, the genuine emoticons to buddies. The actual 185,122 abortions in England and Wales every single 12 months, some of which are crushingly unhappy, some of which are difficult, some of which are a huge, large relief, and some of which make every thing much better. How a person feels about an abortion (and, too, a birth) depends on her family, her romantic relationship, task, age, religion, education, the reactions of people around her. Each and every abortion story is various, and some are positive.


These two instances have brought uncomfortable truths about numerous pro-choicers’ emotions to the surface. They’ve proven that many feel that not only are there proper and wrong motives to get an abortion but that women’s (legal, deemed) selections are up for examination.


“If only Josie had stayed quiet about her pregnancy,” you can come to feel folks muttering, “rather than employing it to even more her career, if only she’d been possibly a tiny bit raped, if only she had expressed shame.” If only Emily Letts had cried, just a little, then possibly our liberal shell would still be intact. There is no correct or incorrect purpose for a lady to get an abortion, and there is no proper or wrong way for her to feel about it. For professional-choicers, there ought to be no confusion.


E mail Eva at e.wiseman@observer.co.united kingdom or follow her on Twitter @EvaWiseman




The tough inquiries becoming faced by today"s professional-choicers | Eva Wiseman

16 Mayıs 2014 Cuma

Mental wellness: "We support men and women from becoming support end users back to citizens"

Theatre music and tickets

Community Restart maps pursuits from sport to voluntary opportunities and builds backlinks with organisations. Photograph: Alley Cat Productions/Brand X/Corbis




Three years in the past, Sharon Stott was depressed and rarely left house. She was unemployed, unable to feed herself appropriately, and as a result, had produced diabetes. She wore only black clothing and identified it challenging to method people, allow alone speak to them. She remembers: “I was anxious and didn’t want to leave the home.”


Soon after some counselling, she was referred to Local community Restart, a support in East Lancashire that aims to get psychological wellness service customers and others who truly feel isolated back into society.


Now Stott, fifty five, has two cleaning jobs which give her with a steady cash flow, and she has injected some colour into her wardrobe. She says: “I’d say my daily life is 100 times greater. I am earning income now so I can feed myself … I’ve come out of my shell. I can actually strategy men and women and talk to them which I could not do prior to.”


Community Restart, a partnership among Lancashire care NHS basis believe in and Lancashire county council, started in 2010 in response to Division of Health guidance to commissioners aimed at tackling social isolation and helping folks to become more involved in their local community. It replaced a day service and caters for adolescents onwards, helping men and women to get paid employment, find housing or join in an action. The service maps what is offered in the local community, regardless of whether it be sport, art, theatre or voluntary possibilities, and builds links with organisations.


Liz Hodge, an occupational therapist and crew leader, says: “I think it is essential. It’s not one thing you get in each and every trust and we perform differently from a clinical staff since we’re much more about a social model. We facilitate people from becoming services users back to citizens that truly feel nicely linked and can entry companies that the local community delivers.”


In accordance to Keith Isherwood, the services manager, there has been a tenfold increase in the quantity of men and women employing the services: “Originally 124 individuals were being supported in East Lancashire in formal day companies. This year, it really is one,200. We have exceeded targets for stopping homelessness and receiving folks into paid employment.” Despite the hard economic climate, the support has aided 98 men and women locate paid perform, while 28 have been supported to retain their jobs.


Community Restart worked with Stott for twelve months obtaining her prepared for perform. One particular of the team accompanied her to a neighborhood centre and assisted her with pc courses and a member of personnel aided her to discover her jobs, apply for them and put together for interview. “Now I’m going out,” she says. “I do panic in the streets and things like that even now but I am managing. I have acquired the centre to fall back on. They’ve helped me back into the community.”


Isherwood says there is a actual need to have for this variety of services: “We know that loneliness affects both physical and mental overall health. But I consider there’s a stigma connected to being lonely and I do not consider folks will admit that they don’t have any pals.”


He adds: “It is possible to be a tourist in your personal local community. It truly is achievable to go out and about, and not speak to anyone apart from the person you acquire goods from.”


This is some thing that was all also familiar to Tara Lane, 52. She was referred to Local community Restart following encountering depression and suicidal ideas. “I was really withdrawn, staying indoors by myself. Things had been receiving genuinely bad … Most days I wouldn’t get dressed and I would not get out of bed. I’d just feed myself and view telly. My daily life had rather much come to a halt with the depression.”


Lane, who is transgender and transitioning from male to female, commenced attending a peer help group for anxiousness and depression. She made pals who assistance her outside of the groups. She says it has improved her social daily life and got her back into the community: “1 of the major problems with mental well being troubles is that folks do withdraw they go into themselves. They get in their home, lock the door and never go back out you have a tendency to sit there and fester with your troubles. At Neighborhood Restart, it truly is about social inclusion, receiving you back out into society and acquiring on with your lifestyle.”


Lane was encouraged to set up a group for transgender individuals. Personnel at the centre helped her with the administration and the legalities they located a venue and supported her by means of the method. “The peer assistance groups are the issue which is aided me the most and the private help is amazing. They are specifically what I need to have,” she says. “They get me out of myself, socialising with people. Transitioning, you do feel nervous and a lack of confidence. The peer assistance groups are fully non-judgmental, they get everybody as they are. It isn’t going to instantaneously make you better but it improves the way you feel in yourself.”


Isherwood adds: “In potential many years, there will be a lot more men and women residing alone and that will be a better issue. People with mental well being concerns tend to be much more impacted by social isolation because of stigma.”


He continues: “It is really hard to say if [Neighborhood Restart] has prevented people from going back into hospital but what we do know is in which individuals have excellent social networks, they tend to remain out of hospital for longer. Most of us, if we have a dilemma, will go to our loved ones and buddies prior to we go to formal solutions. Exactly where folks never have those networks, they will come via to public companies. If individuals can build up individuals networks, individuals tend to use them 1st.”


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Mental wellness: "We support men and women from becoming support end users back to citizens"

6 Mayıs 2014 Salı

Female genital mutilation parties becoming held in United kingdom, MPs told

Fahma Mohamed and fellow anti-FGM campaigners deliver a petition to parliament

Fahma Mohamed (C) and fellow anti-FGM campaigners deliver a petition to parliament. Photograph: Christian Sinibaldi for the Guardian




The cutting of girls at female genital mutilation “parties” is even now going on in Britain and not just taking place abroad, healthcare professionals have informed MPs.


The Commons residence affairs decide on committee has heard that “cutters” – typically older women – are flown into Britain for the events, at which as a lot of as a dozen girls might be operated on.


Janet Fyle, of the Royal University of Midwives, explained that by the time the authorities could be alerted, the cutter would have left. “By the time the girls are cut, the female ‘cutter’ is on her flight back to the country she came from. We can’t go after the cutter. We never know who she or he is. The parents have to be held responsible,” she said.


Professor Janice Rymer, of the Royal University of Obstetricians and Gynaecologists, shared Fyle’s belief that FGM was happening in Britain. Asked about its scale, she mentioned: “We have no thought. We have no data but I am certain it is taking place in this nation.”


The MPs also heard proof that 75 to 80 girls were undergoing FGM reversal operations in Britain each and every year.


The line of questioning by the MPs in the last evidence session of their inquiry into FGM suggested that their report is likely to recommend that healthcare pros be positioned below a new statutory duty to report situations to the police.


The health authorities have been asked for their response to a tv and poster campaign to raise awareness of FGM, and to a requirement that any ladies who faced a risk of mutilation need to have it recorded in their paediatric “red guide”, which is issued to every little one in Britain.


The MPs heard from French legal authorities that statutory reporting to the police was essential in France and that these accountable for mutilating women had been jailed for up to eight years.


The 1st man or woman to be charged underneath Britain’s FGM laws appeared at the Old Bailey final week. Dr Dhanuson Dharmasena, 31, is accused of carrying out the procedure on a female following she gave birth at Whittington hospital in Archway, north London, on 24 November 2012.


Scotland Yard has launched a campaign to avoid women getting flown abroad to be mutilated, senior officers advised the select committee. They blamed the lack of prosecutions more than the previous twenty many years on healthcare experts for failing to report instances to the police.


Nevertheless, Professor Nigel Mathers, of the Royal University of General Practitioners, stated on Tuesday that police had been not placing the blame in the right place.


He stated it was not needed to area a statutory duty on doctors to report situations of FGM simply because they have been presently below a statutory obligation to report cases of child abuse, and FGM was a form of this: “The problems is in identifying people involved,” he mentioned.


His issues was supported by Rymer, who said that she agreed with statutory reporting in principle, but that most cases encountered by gynaecologists and obstetricians concerned pregnant females in their 20s who had been lower sixteen or so years before.


But she was advised by the committee chair, Keith Vaz, that he had no sympathy with that place and it was for the director of public prosecutions, not healthcare specialists, to determine no matter whether a prosecution should proceed in this kind of situations.




Female genital mutilation parties becoming held in United kingdom, MPs told

27 Mart 2014 Perşembe

David Nicholson - the man who believed in becoming ruthless with the NHS

At a time when there was no actual-phrase growth in overall health spending, 168 NHS organisations have been closed down – and 211 new ones created. Some of the Kafka-esque consequences are only now emerging: this kind of as 4,000 health employees made redundant, with regular pay out-offs of £43,000, before currently being rehired by the NHS. All 48,000 senior men and women in the NHS felt the force of the changes and not all had been content with the Nicholson technique. “The downside of grip is that if the grip is round the throat, it does not leave a lot area for manoeuvre,” claims Mr Dorrell.


Sir David says accusations of his bullying are unfair, then turns to the press officer in the corner and roars: “You wouldn’t say I was a bully would you?” The Nicholson reputation for command and control goes back to his pupil days at Bristol Polytechnic when he joined the Communist Party. He did so because the communists were the only student group ready to welcome refugees from the Pinochet dictatorship in Chile.


But it was the Right-wing Tory Enoch Powell who set youthful Nicholson on the path of modifying the encounter of the NHS. In 1961, Powell, then wellness minister, announced programs for a 50 per cent minimize – 75,000 beds – in the country’s psychological asylums, saying: “If we err, it is our duty to err on the side of ruthlessness.” In the Seventies, 1 of Sir David’s initial jobs was to shut mental hospitals in Yorkshire with money from a so-referred to as alter fund. In his last years with the NHS – tomorrow is his final day – he has yet again been closing hospitals as well being care is moved into the local community. A alter fund of £3.eight billion will be utilised to pay out for added GPs, district nurses and specialist units. Sir David says more will be necessary – some £5 billion a year for many years – to cope with an ageing population and advances in technology. “We need to have gutsy political leadership,” he says. “Beware politicians who say we can muddle by means of.”


Right now, it is more and more officials and not just politicians who are blamed when items go incorrect. Sir David has determined to go simply because the Mid Staffs hospital scandal “created some baggage all around me”. He had been in charge – only for eight months – of the strategic overall health authority that integrated Mid Staffs. When he resisted calls to resign, he was dubbed “the man with no shame”. Nowadays he “bitterly regrets” not going to meet the households of people concerned, but nevertheless believes it would have been “irresponsible to walk away”. As he leaves Whitehall, the dilemma of who should be accountable for what continues to be a pressing issue.


Lavish leaving do


Sir David’s departure has been marked by tips of lavish partying, like a dinner costing £12,000. Mentioned one particular insider: “I really do not know the total value but we have been all asked to pay out £195 to go to the dinner.”


“You need to by no means organise your personal retirement party,” mentioned Sir David. “We had a reception at St Thomas’s for 350 men and women, but it was all paid for by my colleagues. There were 60 or so individuals at the dinner and that was organised and paid for by colleagues.”


Loved ones guy


What is he going to do now at 58? Join the international speaking circuit to talk on his “passionate belief” in socialised medication? He will certainly spend much more time with his loved ones in Worcestershire. He and his 2nd wife have a daughter, Rosa, who is only 14 months outdated. “Even I’m not going to live permanently,” he says. “So she’ll devote a whole lot of time with out me!”



David Nicholson - the man who believed in becoming ruthless with the NHS

17 Mart 2014 Pazartesi

1000"s of NHS staff rehired following becoming produced redundant, ministers admit

Andy Burnham

Andy Burnham: ‘It will be utterly galling for nurses who’ve just had a pay reduce from David Cameron to see he’s been handing out cheques like confetti to people who have now been rehired.’ Photograph: Stefan Rousseau/PA




Almost 4,000 NHS employees who have been created redundant in the past four years have since been re-employed by the well being service.


Labour accused the government of “handing out cheques like confetti” soon after ministers admitted that, between May possibly 2010 and last November, 3,950 personnel have been produced redundant and have because been employed back.


Responding to a parliamentary question from Labour’s Julie Hilling, the MP for Bolton West, health minister Dan Poulter stated: “By reducing managers and administrators by over 21,100, we are freeing up further assets for patient care – £5.5bn in this parliament and £1.5bn every single year thereafter.


“The amount of Nationwide Overall health Services personnel estimated to have been produced redundant since May 2010 and subsequently, up until finally November 2013, re-employed by an NHS organisation on (a) a permanent basis is 2,570 and (b) a fixed-term contract basis is 1,380.”


Poulter cautioned that the figures, taken from the NHS’s electronic personnel record, had been “unvalidated”.


The shadow overall health secretary, Andy Burnham, explained: “It will be utterly galling for nurses who’ve just had a pay lower from David Cameron to see he is been handing out cheques like confetti to folks who have now been rehired. On his observe, we have witnessed payoffs for managers and spend cuts for nurses.


“It really is clear that people who obtained payoffs are now coming back to the NHS in ever better numbers. We want to know no matter whether the prime minister has honoured his promise to recover redundancy payments from men and women who have been re-employed by his new organisations.


“The sickening scale of the waste triggered by Cameron’s reorganisation is last but not least turning into clear. It will infuriate individuals who cannot get a GP appointment or nurses who are struggling to pay out the payments.”




1000"s of NHS staff rehired following becoming produced redundant, ministers admit

5 Mart 2014 Çarşamba

Tim Flannery says coal communities are becoming kept in dark about dangers

Climate scientist Tim Flannery says communities living close to coalmines are currently being kept in the dark about the dangers, and has called for the inquiry into the results of wind turbines on wellness to also seem at mines and fires.


Thousands of residents have been affected by the fire at the Hazelwood coalmine which has been burning for 3 weeks, sending smoke across the neighborhood of Morwell in Victoria.


Flannery, the former chief commissioner of the Climate Commission and now head of the Climate Council, has expressed concern for the wellness of men and women exposed to the smoke, and questioned regardless of whether ample preparation was accomplished by mine operator GDF Suez.


The Abbott government has promised to commission “comprehensive” investigation into the attainable wellness dangers of wind turbines.


“Coal fires are a notorious risk for coalmines. In North America total towns have had to be relocated because of fires that have been uncontrollable,” Flannery stated.


“In the US and Canada there are something like fifty five,000 deaths associated to burning coal,” he stated, citing a statement from the US organisation Doctors for Social Obligation.


Medical professionals earlier this week warned of the danger to residents of Morwell from carcinogenic particulate pollution, which was discovered to be at amounts up to 20 occasions the standard average.


Vulnerable groups of folks in South Morwell have been recommended to temporarily relocate due to the danger of PM2.5 particle, but numerous residents expressed confusion about the dangers.


Flannery called for a government inquiry into all Australian mines and the risks to communities.


“Our government is doing an inquiry into the overall health affect of wind [turbines], but here we’ve acquired this chance with coal. If the federal government expanded their inquiry that would be excellent commence,” he explained.


“I’m anxious that we do not but know what this coal fire means for the wellness of firefighters and the individuals of Morwell,” Flannery told representatives of the Australian Nursing and Midwifery Federation.


Flannery questioned whether GDF Suez was taking ample action to maintain the local community informed and mentioned the fire highlighted the require for better preparation and inquiry into the state of mines all around the country, and the risks they posed to nearby communities.


“Do the businesses operating these operations know the health risks? If they do, then they need to share them. If not, then why not?” Flannery said in a statement.


“Other crucial queries have not been answered. Why did the fire take hold? Did GDF Suez correctly clean up the mine website?


“The core of our concern is that this is a widespread chance that is unacknowledged in the community, but without information on other coalmines we’re just in the dark.”


GDF Suez said in a statement on 20 January that the fire, which started in a element of the mine not utilized for thirty many years, is “one of the most significant fire circumstances ever confronted at the Morwell mine”, and rejected accusations that leftover infrastructure was not removed from the internet site.


On Wednesday the firm also said rehabilitation perform was carried out in 2007-08 in “a area of the northern batters … undertaken by truck and shovel, exactly where some of the exposed coal faces in this region had been covered with clay”.


GDF Suez mentioned all around 85% of the fire was now contained.


GDF Suez and the prime minister’s workplace have been contacted for further comment.



Tim Flannery says coal communities are becoming kept in dark about dangers

23 Ocak 2014 Perşembe

Older cancer patients becoming written off instead of taken care of, says charity

Older cancer individuals are becoming “written off” since of their age, a top charity has warned. Macmillan Cancer Assistance mentioned some sufferers have been getting deemed as as well outdated for remedy and had been not assessed on their total fitness.


Research from the charity and the National Cancer Intelligence Network (NCIN) also found that tens of thousands of pensioners diagnosed with cancer have survived for at least a decade.


The figures showed more than 130,000 men and women in the Uk have survived for at least ten many years soon after currently being diagnosed with cancer at the age of 65 or over. That quantity incorporated more than 8,000 sufferers who had been diagnosed at the age of 80 and in excess of.


But regardless of the huge amount of older people who are “extended-phrase” survivors of the illness, the charity stated numerous individuals in the United kingdom are getting denied remedy simply because they are deemed to be as well old.


It stated that cancer survival rates in this age group are “poor”.


Macmillan pointed out that survival prices in the United kingdom in contrast badly with those on the continent and warned of what it saw as a worrying trend in the way men and women are taken care of.


For many common cancers – which includes prostate, breast, lung, stomach, ovarian and kidney cancers – the United kingdom and Ireland have a decrease 5-year survival rate than the rest of Europe, a spokesman mentioned.


Well being staff must guarantee treatment choices are not based mostly on age alone and ought to also assess a patient’s bodily and psychological properly-becoming, the charity added.


“It truly is wrong to publish off older folks as also outdated for treatment method,” stated Macmillan’s chief executive Ciaran Devane


“With a appropriate evaluation and acceptable therapy, our analysis displays that many older cancer individuals can live for a prolonged time and can even be cured.


“Whilst it’s very good information that so a lot of older people are benefiting from remedy, many thousands a lot more could live longer if our survival prices for in excess of-65s matched these in comparable nations.


“The barriers to getting treatment method – which incorporate age discrimination and inadequate evaluation methods – should be tackled now so more older folks can survive cancer and live for several many years.”


NCIN’s clinical lead Dr Mick Peake extra: “It is vital that all individuals acquire the ideal and most successful remedy primarily based on the nature of their cancer and their fitness for therapy and that chronological age alone is not the deciding factor.


“We know that cancer survival rates in older individuals in many other nations are better than in the United kingdom and guaranteeing optimum treatment at all ages is the way of tackling this issue.”


Dr Mark Porter, chairman of council at the British Health-related Association, said: “It is essential that all healthcare professionals make sure that patients are treated on the basis of their clinical need.


“With an increasingly ageing population, it need to be a crucial part of medical professionalism to ensure that older sufferers are taken care of with the care and respect they deserve.”



Older cancer patients becoming written off instead of taken care of, says charity

17 Ocak 2014 Cuma

Why Becoming In a position To Compartmentalize Is A Essential Ingredient For Chance-Taking

The following post was published on the Expertise@Wharton web site on January 14, 2014.


It is a crazy morning at home, and your spouse is furious at you. Harried, you slam the automobile door shut and race off to work where an important activity awaits.


Your capability to tune out the scenario at residence and concentrate on the occupation at hand is facilitated by your emotional understanding. It is a form of emotional intelligence, according to Jeremy Yip, a lecturer and analysis scholar at Wharton. Compartmentalizing enables a individual to identify what is stressing them out and to allow other, unrelated variables in their existence to stand on their very own merits, Yip says.


But are men and women with large ranges of emotional intelligence capable to go a single phase additional and get risks unrelated to what is stressing them out? Yes, notes Yip, whose analysis review, “The Emotionally Intelligent Choice-Maker: Emotion Knowing Potential Lowers the Impact of Incidental Anxiousness on Risk-taking,” was published in the journal Psychological Science. His co-writer is Stéphane Côté, professor of organizational habits and human resource management at the University of Toronto.


The review shows that folks with lower levels of emotional comprehending let unrelated stressors to make them far more risk averse, even though these with greater levels are a lot more likely to take a likelihood. “By identifying the source of their emotions, individuals with substantial emotional intelligence recognize whether their feelings are irrelevant to the choices they want to make,” Yip notes. “As a end result, they don’t expertise that spillover effect. They may well truly feel anxious, but they do not allow it influence their decision.”


In the study’s very first experiment, the researchers gave 108 University of Toronto students the Mayer-Salovey-Caruso Emotional Intelligence Check, which measures ranges of emotional intelligence.


The participants were then split into two groups. A single was provided an anxiety-provoking task: to put together a speech in one minute. To ratchet up the stress, members of that group were informed they would be filmed, and that the footage would later be proven to peers learning academic and social standing at the university. (After the testing was concluded, participants have been informed that there would be no speech right after all.)


The other group was offered a fairly soothing assignment: They have been asked to prepare a grocery record. For compensation, participants in both groups have been provided a separate choice: acquire $ 1, or consider a one particular in 10 chance to get $ ten.


For those offered the demanding speechwriting assignment, people who scored reduced on the emotional intelligence check produced the riskier option — going for the $ 10 — only sixteen.7% of the time. Individuals with increased ranges of emotional intelligence, meanwhile, picked the riskier option 48.three% of the time.


For the relaxed men and women offered the grocery listing assignment, who functioned as a handle group, the benefits have been considerably closer with each other, no matter how considerably emotional intelligence each and every participant possessed.


“As expected, there was a negative impact of incidental nervousness on chance taking among folks with reduce emotion-understanding capability, but there was no effect amongst men and women with larger emotion-knowing potential,” the authors write.


To Worry or Not to Worry?


The second experiment was developed to see if folks with reduce levels of emotional understanding could be prompted into creating the exact same risky options as their counterparts with more emotional understanding.


This experiment began out much like the initial: Every person was given the Mayer-Salovey-Caruso test to measure their emotional intelligence. In a separate experimental session, the 132 participants have been both asked to mentally prepare a speech or a grocery listing.


But this time, each and every group was subdivided into two elements. One was provided no even more instruction the other was tipped off that they may really feel worried because making a speech is a naturally anxiousness-producing task, or that they may feel calm since producing a grocery checklist is not nerve-racking. This step, Yip says, was developed to give a bit of emotional intelligence for individuals to whom it does not come naturally.


All participants had been then offered the decision of giving their e-mail tackle to get much more info about attending a clinic to receive a flu shot. They have been told that selecting not to have the shot was the riskier choice, simply because they were more most likely to get sick.



Why Becoming In a position To Compartmentalize Is A Essential Ingredient For Chance-Taking