External contributors – Page 258

  • Comment

    Tim Benson and Justin Whatling on measuring outcomes

    2008-08-13T09:00:00Z

    The only way to find out if your healthcare strategies are working is through reliable measurement.

  • Comment

    David Amos on staff engagement

    2008-08-11T09:00:00Z

    The people of Hounslow, west London, have been impressed by a street cleaner who dances like Michael Jackson. This is either the council chief executive on a back to the floor initiative thinking about how much his contract is worth, or an extremely engaged employee.

  • Comment

    Hilary Thomas on healthy competition

    2008-08-11T09:00:00Z

    The right sort of competition in healthcare is a prescription for huge gains in quality and efficiency. But while this can be encouraged partly through attractive incentives, have we been too lenient in pursuing more punitive measures?

  • Comment

    Linda Havard on unlocking clinical leadership

    2008-08-11T09:00:00Z

    Lord Darzi's next stage review focuses on the importance of healthcare delivery, but at the expense of the details. Are local authorities up to the challenge of meeting the review's grand vision?

  • Comment

    Angela Greatley on worrying welfare reforms

    2008-08-08T09:00:00Z

    Late last month, the government published its latest plans for welfare reform. Many of the proposals in the green paper, No One Written Off, are likely to be very significant for sick and disabled people.

  • Comment

    Media Watch: Is Johnson leaving the DH?

    2008-08-07T09:00:00Z

    Alan Johnson's days at the Department of Health may be numbered. The Labour leadership crisis sparked by David Miliband and bored lobby correspondents has led to speculation the health secretary will be elevated either to the top job or deputy prime minister.

  • Comment

    Michael White on feminism

    2008-08-07T09:00:00Z

    I couldn't help noticing in recent days how feminism kept popping up. As part of the wider debate about equality affecting class and poverty, gender, race, disability, it never goes away.

  • Comment

    Sue Ashmore on breastfeeding and public health

    2008-08-06T09:00:00Z

    To convey the public health benefits of breastfeeding, authors sometimes ask readers to imagine a miracle drug that prevents numerous childhood illnesses, has continued benefits into adulthood, is free to manufacture and readily available.

  • Comment

    Jim Wardrope on emergency medicine myths

    2008-08-06T09:00:00Z

    Lord Darzi's review of the NHS has yielded some good results for emergency medicine. However, there are a number of persistent myths about emergency care that could undermine the good work that has been done so far.

  • Comment

    Sandy Watson on the need for community engagement

    2008-08-06T09:00:00Z

    Community engagement is a fundamental part of community planning. We must listen to what the public has to say about levels of service and then take action to improve performance.

  • Comment

    Simon Bird on whether clinicians are always the best leaders

    2008-08-05T09:00:00Z

    It seems rather counter-cultural right now to question the drive for clinicians to take up leadership positions. However, the assumptions behind the drive, while compelling and applicable to some, should not be extrapolated across whole professions.

  • Comment

    Steve Onyett on medical leadership

    2008-08-04T09:00:00Z

    The Darzi review has shed new light on the challenge of letting go of central control. The idea that staff can be clinicians, partners and leaders is an engaging way of conveying that leadership needs to be widely dispersed.

  • Comment

    Neil Goodwin on leadership lessons from David Lloyd George

    2008-08-04T09:00:00Z

    I was delighted to see David Lloyd George listed as one of the most influential people in the history of the NHS - we can learn a lot from his leadership experience.

  • Comment

    Helen Bevan on paths to improvement

    2008-08-04T09:00:00Z

    The title of Lord Darzi's report - High Quality Care for All - proclaims the significant and welcome focus on quality improvement in the next phase of NHS reform.

  • Comment

    Peter Reader on integrating healthcare

    2008-08-04T09:00:00Z

    Lord Darzi's next stage review contains the seeds of potentially the greatest revolution the NHS has seen since it was formed - a commitment to seek expressions of interest to run 'integrated care pilots'.

  • Comment

    Noel Plumridge on problems with PFI accounting rules

    2008-07-31T09:00:00Z

    Rules, they say, are made to be broken. There was never anything sacrosanct about Gordon Brown's fiscal rule, which has restricted public sector debt to less than 40 per cent of national income.

  • Comment

    Your Humble Servant on testing GPs

    2008-07-31T09:00:00Z

    To: Don Wise, chief executiveFrom: Paul Servant, assistant chief executiveRe: Top of the docs

  • Comment

    Michael White on facing up to obesity

    2008-07-31T09:00:00Z

    Amid the hype over Labour's defeat in Glasgow East, I suspect the most important consequence of the by-election will not be the ejection of Gordon Brown.

  • Comment

    Media Watch: taking on obesity

    2008-07-31T09:00:00Z

    As health secretary Alan Johnson packed up for the summer, he left a stern warning about the dangers of overindulgence.

  • Comment

    Paul Stanton on NHS boards' duty to the public

    2008-07-30T09:00:00Z

    The good of the public must be served ahead of NHS boards’ narrowly defined organisational interests, placing them as servants of the community need and not its masters.