All News articles – Page 1880

  • News

    Aid boost for tribunal claimants

    2001-01-18T00:00:00Z

    Health boards in Scotland should brace themselves for more employment tribunal claims - and more successful ones.

  • News

    Gin and bear it: upbeat in the face of adversity

    2001-01-18T00:00:00Z

    Alan Randall from Eastbourne Hospitals trust was the only chief executive to speak to HSJ on the record about the demands of his job. He is surprisingly upbeat about working in a role which is both 'knackering and exhilarating'.

  • News

    Struck-off doctors accidentally listed on website

    2001-01-18T00:00:00Z

    A website which claimed to be a guide to good doctors included two who had been struck off last year, and also wrongly described a third, according to the BMA News Review. The Good Doctor site, whose major shareholder is Alliance Unichem Group, included disgraced gynaecologist Richard Neale, who worked ...

  • News

    CHCs struggling to cope in countdown to abolition

    2001-01-18T00:00:00Z

    Patients may be left in the lurch as complaints services begin to fall apart ahead of the planned formal abolition of community health councils in 2002.

  • News

    THE PERSUADERS

    2001-01-11T00:00:00Z

    Name: David Panter.

  • News

    What the paper says

    2001-01-11T00:00:00Z

    'Use of compulsory powers will generally only be appropriate if a person is resisting care and treatment needed either in their best interests or because without care and treatment they will pose a significant risk of serious harm to other people.'

  • News

    This Page is not for turning

    2001-01-11T00:00:00Z

    Northumbria Healthcare trust and its chief executive, Sue Page, are hailed nationally as a model of co-operative working, yet grassroots staff tell a different story. Paul Stephenson finds out why

  • News

    monitor

    2001-01-11T00:00:00Z

    January is a unique month, ponders Monitor, offering the chance to pack one year away neatly while another shyly reveals herself. It is a contemplative time - a chance to look back to the highs - (the dazzling debut of Giggles Denham! How we roared! ) the lows - (the ...

  • News

    Models for partnerships

    2001-01-11T00:00:00Z

    Various models for public-private partnership are envisaged. For elective care, the concordat suggests that primary care groups and primary care trusts could rent accommodation from the private sector but use NHS staff, on their normal contractual terms, to deliver the service. Or a trust might 'sub-contract' the provision of a ...

  • News

    'Do not limit new models of scrutiny'

    2001-01-11T00:00:00Z

    The NHS Confederation has given a guarded welcome to the Health and Social Care Bill's proposals for local authority scrutiny of NHS services.

  • News

    With PALS like these. . .

    2001-01-11T00:00:00Z

    The framework for the patient advocacy and liaison service is there, but where's the detail, wonders Alison Moore

  • News

    Just keep it simple, stupid

    2001-01-11T00:00:00Z

    Everywhere you look, performance measures are sprouting as the control freaks in Whitehall village seek to oversee every aspect of NHS activity. The old Soviet Union tried to exert this degree of control before the collapse of communism: it failed.We should learn from the comrades to keep it simple.

  • News

    Substantial pay hike likely for NHS laboratory staff

    2001-01-11T00:00:00Z

    NHS staff not covered by the pay review body system are to receive a pay rise of 'at last 3.7 per cent', with substantial rises going to laboratory staff where there have been serious problems with recruitment and retention. Health minister John Denham said rises would be 'fair and affordable', ...

  • News

    Honour high

    2001-01-11T00:00:00Z

    Many of those who have played a key role in delivering the NHS modernisation agenda found their work recognised in the new year honours.

  • News

    More frills than skills

    2001-01-11T00:00:00Z

    Patients love the trappings of private treatment, says Anne Christie, but they may be less safe than in the NHS

  • News

    More joined-up working is the way forward post Langlands

    2001-01-11T00:00:00Z

    Better regulation of health service professionals, more joined-up working across agencies, and targeted action in selected areas to improve equity of access are all needed to build on the significant progress made by the NHS under Sir Alan Langlands, according to the public accounts committee.

  • News

    High risks, scarce talent leave NHS fighting to fill top jobs

    2001-01-11T00:00:00Z

    One in four top NHS jobs is vacant - and the gaps at the 'top table' of management mirror recruitment concerns at trusts across the country, HSJ sources have warned.

  • News

    Neurology services failing to meet waiting target

    2001-01-11T00:00:00Z

    The Liberal Democrats have launched a damning report on neurology services, claiming that only one in five hospitals is able to offer an outpatient appointment within three months and nearly half offering appointments at least six months away. Health spokesman Paul Burstow claims that an extra 200 neurologists are needed ...

  • News

    'Families know they have a timebomb to face'

    2001-01-11T00:00:00Z

    Louis Appleby was appointed national director for mental health in April last year, with a brief to 'spearhead the government's drive to modernise and reform mental health services'.

  • News

    Means to an end

    2001-01-11T00:00:00Z

    Abortions are easy to obtain - but there are wide regional variations in who gets access to NHS-funded services, reports Claire Laurent