Latest news – Page 2845

  • News

    In Brief: Health expert Chris Ham

    1998-05-21T00:00:00Z

    Health authorities should be obliged to explain clinical decisions, and the NHS should have a system of appeal tribunals for patients refused treatment, health expert Chris Ham argues in a book, published by the King's Fund, looking at the lessons of the Jaymee Bowen case.

  • News

    In Brief: Research by Pay & Workforce Research

    1998-05-21T00:00:00Z

    Time lost in sickness absence cost the NHS more than £500m in 199798, research by Pay & Workforce Research shows. Revealing the data last week, PWR consultant Gillian Whitaker urged managers to use return-to-work interviews to identify the causes of absence.

  • News

    Dobson spends on 'rebuttal officer' as waiting lists soar

    1998-05-21T00:00:00Z

    Health ministers have come under attack for spending thousands of pounds on a unit to defend government policy as waiting lists head for another record high.

  • News

    Siemens loses 15 staff from health outfit

    1998-05-21T00:00:00Z

    A healthcare information company announced key job losses last week but denied being on the critical list. Siemens Healthcare Services has made 15 of its 100 staff redundant, closed two regional offices, and replaced managing director John Kane.

  • News

    Dobson gives go-ahead to regional shake-up

    1998-05-21T00:00:00Z

    Health secretary Frank Dobson gave the go-ahead this week for a shake-up of NHS regions in London and the south of England.

  • News

    New approach to tackling Welsh health inequalities

    1998-05-21T00:00:00Z

    The government has unveiled a 'new approach' to tackling some of the worst health problems in Europe in a widely applauded green paper.

  • News

    Milburn admits patients should have a say

    1998-05-21T00:00:00Z

    Health minister Alan Milburn publicly accepted last week that the idea that 'doctor knows best' is out of date and inappropriate to the modern health service.

  • News

    Nurses accept 3.8 per cent staged pay deal

    1998-05-21T00:00:00Z

    The nurses' 3.8 per cent pay award was accepted reluctantly by the staff side last week, despite continuing opposition from Unison and the GMB, which voted against settling.

  • News

    Perfect specimen

    1998-05-21T00:00:00Z

    Botanist David Bellamy with Jessica Oxley (left) and Kathryn Bonner at Thackray Medical Museum, Leeds, where he opened a new gallery. It will house a collection of 600 earthenware drug jars which lined the shelves of pharmacies 200-300 years ago. The jars were used to boost an apothecary's status in ...

  • News

    'Confusion' follows Dobson directive to redesign planned psychiatric unit

    1998-05-21T00:00:00Z

    Mental health campaigners accused the government last week of creating policy confusion in a row over mixed-sex wards.

  • News

    Single inspection body for homes

    1998-05-21T00:00:00Z

    Plans to create a new separate inspection body for nursing and residential homes have been welcomed throughout the NHS.

  • News

    MSF urges Blood Authority to reopen centres

    1998-05-21T00:00:00Z

    The MSF union has called for the reopening of three blood centres closed during a much-criticised shake-up of the transfusion service.

  • News

    Spend more on services for severely mentally ill, experts tell ministers

    1998-05-21T00:00:00Z

    Ministers must spend more on developing mental health services, targeting severely mentally ill people in deprived urban areas for intensive help, leading professionals urged this week.

  • News

    Bradford Royal Infirmary's new clinical skills teaching laboratory

    1998-05-21T00:00:00Z

    Medical student David Swann gets intimate with a retinopathy head at Bradford Royal Infirmary's new clinical skills teaching laboratory.

  • News

    Trusts allot extra £150m to year 2000 IT bug

    1998-05-21T00:00:00Z

    Trusts have earmarked £150m for replacing medical equipment that will fail because of the year 2000 computer bug, according to the National Audit Office.

  • News

    In Brief: Tees health authority

    1998-05-21T00:00:00Z

    Tees health authority has set up an independent inquiry into the psychiatric care given to Jonathan Crisp, who was sentenced to life imprisonment last week for the murder of Stockton-on-Tees resident Peter McNamee last year.

  • News

    In Brief: Health council directive to ban tobacco advertising

    1998-05-21T00:00:00Z

    The European parliament last week voted through the health council directive to ban tobacco advertising without amendment. 'This is the most important step we have taken towards reducing tobacco consumption since tobacco advertising was banned from television, ' public health minister Tessa Jowell said.

  • News

    In Brief: Chartered Society of Physiotherapy

    1998-05-21T00:00:00Z

    The government should set a national target to reduce work-related illness and injury, the Chartered Society of Physiotherapy says in its response to the public health green paper, Our Healthier Nation . The CSP recommends reducing the number of days' work lost due to sickness absence by one tenth by ...

  • News

    In Brief: Seventh child infected with E coli 0157

    1998-05-21T00:00:00Z

    Dorset health authority confirmed last week that a seventh child in the Purbeck district of Dorset has become infected with E coli 0157 and is being cared for at home.

  • News

    In Brief: Royal National Institute for the Blind survey results

    1998-05-21T00:00:00Z

    Blind and partially sighted people over 60 face 'isolation, poverty and loneliness' on a daily basis, according to a UK-wide survey of 500 people by the Royal National Institute for the Blind. More than one in five never had a visit from social services yet many of the daily hurdles ...