All News articles – Page 2137
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Prison healthcare working group avoids shifting onus on to the NHS
Proposals for managing prison healthcare have shied away from shifting accountability to the NHS.
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Reference-cost figures could be much improved by application of a blunt instrument
Before the advent of league tables - and even before the dawn of the Thatcher era - hospitals were required to publish figures for costs per inpatient week. High-spending institutions were exhorted to investigate reasons for their supposed poor performance. The naivety of this approach was exposed by an economist ...
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Roylance appeal to privy council fails
The Privy Council has dismissed Dr John Roylance's appeal against being struck off for his part in the Bristol case.
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Policy and substance will stop NHSnet becoming an anoraks' jamboree
While I strongly agree with Carole Appleby that chief executives and others should be encouraged to use the increasing range of information available, I need to sound a note of warning.
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Short cuts Parish protests as ambulance siren 'disturbs peace'
An ambulance trust has come under fire for using sirens and 'disturbing the peace' of a village in Suffolk. East Anglian Ambulance trust was criticised last month for 'overstating' response times in an independent inquiry. Now parish councillors in Cavendish, near Sudbury, have written to the trust protesting that sirens ...
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Waiting-list target hit a month ahead of schedule
The government's pledge to cut waiting lists to pre-election levels has been achieved a month early in England.
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Careering ahead:
Bharpur Singh Mudhuadia (left), Mandeep Singh and Jasmeet Saahney (right), from Hounslow Manor School, west London, read a careers pamphlet on medical physics at a Hounslow and Spelthorne Community and Mental Health trust careers day.
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Trusts disappear across UK
More than 100 trusts are affected by mergers taking place across the UK today.
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Short cuts Acheson praises government action on inequalities
The government has done 'far more than we ever dreamed of' to tackle inequalities in health, Sir Donald Acheson told HSJ this week. Sir Donald said he was 'amazed at how much work' the government had done in response to his Independent Inquiry into Inequalities in Health, published six months ...
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Commissioner for public appointments Did Sir Len ask the chairs about manipulation?
I was fascinated to read that Dame Rennie Fritchie has been appointed as commissioner for public appointments (news focus, page 14, 4 March).
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Medical devices in users' homes fall through year 2000 loophole
Thousands of medical devices in patients' houses and nursing homes have slipped through a hole in the NHS Executive's year 2000 programme, it emerged last week.
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Vroom with a view
Look out at the car park adjoining the admin block of a typical trust and it should be possible to tell which car belongs to which manager. A VW Passat or Landrover Freelander - that will be the chief executive's. BMW 300 Series or Rover 620 - it must be ...
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telephone services
'It seemed a bit robotic, but you pick up vibes from the caller and use your clinical judgement'