All News articles – Page 2146
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News
External candidates treated like poor relations by panels
I applaud the letter regarding the lack of a level playing field for external candidates applying for primary care group chief executive posts (25 February).
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Short cuts Researchers say ovarian cancer checks 'premature'
Women should not be screened for ovarian cancer until 'further research provides a better understanding of the potential benefits, harms and risks involved', according to the NHS centre for reviews and dissemination in York. The CRD says that although 'intuitively, it seems common sense that early detection of a cancer ...
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Call for 'third way' NHS management
The government needs to find a 'third way' in health management if its reforms are to succeed, a leading think tank has argued.
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NHS managers run the Hampshire call centre
Peter Mitchell's story states: 'Access's alternative approach is to manage the NHS Direct call centre as well as equip it - it runs the pilots at the Northumbria and Hampshire ambulance trusts.'
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in brief
The British Medical Association has warned that 'a growing workforce crisis' could leave 350 obstetricians and gynaecologists without NHS contracts in 2001. The BMA's junior doctors committee has asked the Department of Health to fund new consultant posts and wants a 12-month extension on current contracts.
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in brief
A ground-breaking employment tribunal award of £103,000 for disability discrimination has been increased to £167,000. British Sugar was ordered to pay £103,000 to partially-sighted Nick Kirker in 1997 for unfairly selecting him for redundancy. Now the tribunal has ordered the company to meet his tax liabilities on the award, as ...
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Short cuts Family of dead boy claims hospital failed him
Schoolboy Imran Khan, 15, would still be alive if he had received proper hospital treatment, his family lawyer claimed at a fatal accident inquiry into his care at the Royal Victoria Infirmary in Glasgow. Anne Smith QC said there was evidence that a doctor had pushed a chest drain further ...
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'Bolam test' didn't save HA from smear defeat
Women's confidence in the reliability of cervical smear tests is bound to have been dented by the cases brought against Kent and Canterbury health authority by three women who developed cervical cancer.
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Dyke: 'Patients not to blame for no-shows'
Three out of four patients who fail to show up for a doctor's appointment do so because of poor communications and management systems, according to a leading government adviser.
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Idle hands must not tinker with devolution's big issues Politicians may interfere with health if chiefs and chairs are not clued up
It surely says something about the uncertainties of devolution that Northern Ireland's health minister can put forward a plan for reforming health and social services broadly on a par with the white paper shake- ups of England, Scotland and Wales only to have his carefully worked-through proposals welcomed as 'an ...
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Pioneering programme teams managers with lecturers in attempt to marry practice and development
Chris Ham stresses the importance of management development grounded in management practice, and suggests a practitioner faculty as one answer. We agree, but are experimenting with other approaches to forge this link.
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Short cuts King's Fund appoints new senior associates
Baroness Cumberlege, Lord Harris of Haringey, Catherine McLoughlin and Sir Leslie Turnberg have been appointed senior associates of the King's Fund. Sir Leslie will work with the Health Quality Service on clinical standards, while NHS Confederation chair Ms McLoughlin will work on 'professional roles and leadership development'. Baroness Cumberlege, a ...
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Short cuts Colorectal cancer screening pilots announced
Ministers have announced colorectal cancer screening pilot services for England and Scotland. The English site is in Coventry and Warwickshire. The Scottish pilot is in Tayside, Grampian and Fife. The project will run for two years, with screening kits sent to patients' homes, before being sent to laboratories for testing. ...
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Short cuts Call for action on private healthcare 'deficiencies'
The government has been urged to tackle 'fundamental deficiencies' in private healthcare by Action for Victims of Medical Accidents. In evidence to the health select committee, AVMA says 'inadequate specialist medical and nursing cover' is a 'critical factor' in failures to diagnose post- operative complications at private hospitals. It says ...