25 Şubat 2014 Salı

Today in healthcare: Tuesday 25 February

Good morning and welcome to the day-to-day website from the Guardian’s community for healthcare specialists, providing a roundup of the key news stories across the sector.


If there is a story, report or event you’d like to highlight – or you would like to share your ideas on any of the healthcare issues in the news nowadays – you can get in touch by leaving a comment beneath the line or tweeting us at @GdnHealthcare.


The Guardian reviews that a company doing work to entry NHS prescription data on behalf of pharmaceutical firms attempted to indicator a gentlemen’s agreement final year for entry to the new central database of health care information on each patient in England.


There’s also information of a warning by the World Overall health Organisation that getting overweight is in danger of becoming the new norm for youngsters as nicely as grownups in Europe as it issued figures displaying that up to a third of eleven-12 months-olds across the area are as well hefty.


Today’s other healthcare headlines:


• BBC: NHS death costs ‘should be ignored’


• Telegraph: NHS health-related information database could assist prevent condition, senior medical doctors say


• eHealth Insider: Care.data ought to be opt-in – Jarman


• Nursing Instances: Shortage of Belfast nurses sparks emergency summit with minister


• HSJ: Foundation trusts overspend on company staff


• GP on the web: Flu vaccine campaign set for growth in September


Chris Hopson, chief executive of the Foundation Believe in Network these days on parity of esteem for psychological overall health, calling for it to become “a truth rather than a fig leaf”. He writes:



… mental well being treatment performs, it’s cost efficient, and it even saves the NHS and the exchequer cash. It is also important that we seem after the critically psychological unwell, properly to handle the danger to the two wider society and people who have mental well being troubles.


But the most scandalous statistic of all is that only 26% of adults with psychological illness receive care, in contrast, for illustration, with 92% of men and women with diabetes.



Creating for the Guardian’s new cities task, Leo Benedictus explains why urban residing can be negative for your mental health and Patrick Strudwick, for Comment is free of charge, says we cannot leave mentally unwell men and women at the mercy of unregulated therapists.


Hazel Davis reviews for the network on Born in Bradford, a task examine set up as a longitudinal research of 13,500 youngsters born in the city, which is assisting to shape NHS solutions. Davis explains:



So far the data has resulted in a number of modifications in the NHS in the city, such as the introduction of universal testing for gestational diabetes, growing detection and treatment method from 2% to 7% and program vitamin D dietary supplements in antenatal care. The Content (Wholesome and Energetic Parenting Programme For Early Many years) teaches women how to reduce their BMI and make sure their kids are growing up with healthy diet plans. The programme, which is in pilot phase, consists of group sessions just before and following birth, led by early years workers.


Ideas for the Bib data utilization “on the ground” are immense and dependent on a lot more funding. The team hopes to do much more lectures (the two in schools and for the Bib participants) and integrate some of the data into the college curriculum.



Arissa, mum and sisters
Born in Bradford was launched in 2007 to find out why the city’s infant mortality rate is twice the British common.

Elsewhere, contributor Dr Chris Lancelot writes for GP online calling for key modifications to the care.data project. NHS England, he says, “seems to have no insight into the mess that it alone has created”, and he adds:



If NHS England thinks that among now and October all it needs is a slicker PR campaign, then it is sorely mistaken. With out massive changes to the way care.data is structured and organised, by the autumn the opposition to it will have grown exponentially right up until the complete country knows the true truth — and by then the huge bulk will have opted out, possibly permanently, from any NHS data-sharing agreement of any type.


So I have a clear and basic message to NHS England: unless of course you pay attention to what the public is saying, and make major alterations to the programme, care.information is dead in the water.



That is all for right now, we’ll be back tomorrow with our digest of the day’s healthcare news.



Today in healthcare: Tuesday 25 February

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