All News articles – Page 2283

  • News

    THERE IS A WAY BETWEEN DISTRICT GENERAL AND COTTAGE HOSPITAL...

    1998-03-19T00:00:00Z

    I was interested to see the article on Kent and Canterbury Hospital (News, page 7, 26 February). Across the UK there are many proposals for reconfiguring acute services, and local communities are understandably concerned about the potential loss of their district general hospital. There are, however, successful and proven ways ...

  • News

    ...THERE ARE OPPORTUNITIES FOR TRUSTS TO RESEARCH BETTER COMMUNICATION

    1998-03-19T00:00:00Z

    Your articles on communication and Jane Beenstock's feature ('In the clear', page 32, 12 February) are a timely reminder of the importance of this issue. There is far too little published work in this area.

  • News

    ORGANISING WORK TO KEEP STRESS AT BAY

    1998-03-19T00:00:00Z

    Sue Parkyn-Smith of the Health and Safety Executive is right when she says ('Taking the strain', Special Report, 29 January) that it is how an organisation manages and how it uses staff - 'not too many or too few demands' - that have significant effects on stress and health at ...

  • News

    HA appoints public health director at last

    1998-03-19T00:00:00Z

    A health authority without a public health director since 1995 has at last made an appointment.

  • News

    ...AND WHILE IT'S A STRUGGLE AGAINST NOTIONS OF 'PROPER' WRITING...

    1998-03-19T00:00:00Z

    Hilary Spiers poses an important question: why can those working in the NHS not use simple English? Over the past few years I have taught about 400 effective writing courses in various parts of the health service, and I am constantly having to fight the notion that anyone who uses ...

  • News

    Headline to come after cartoon in position BY MICHAEL WHITE

    1998-03-19T00:00:00Z

    By now, you've seen the colour of the chancellor's NHS money, heard all about Welfare to Work initiatives in the service, even seen pre-Budget photos of Uncle Gordon playing with the kids. Someone else's kids to be sure (dammit, it's still someone else's upbeat economy too: Ken Clarke's), but they're ...

  • News

    Academic to replace Sir Duncan as head of HSMU

    1998-03-19T00:00:00Z

    Former NHS chief executive Professor Sir Duncan Nichol is stepping down as director of a high-profile health services management unit - to be replaced by a more 'neutral' academic.

  • News

    Information in abundance

    1998-03-19T00:00:00Z

    EFFECTIVE USE OF HEALTH CARE INFORMATION

  • News

    Managers' leaders welcome pounds500m but warn of longer-term problems

    1998-03-19T00:00:00Z

    Managers' leaders greeted the extra pounds500m for the NHS as a vital 'first instalment' that would help them to tackle long-term waiting list problems.

  • News

    pounds500m cash boost brings total to pounds2bn

    1998-03-19T00:00:00Z

    Chancellor Gordon Brown this week announced a pounds500m budget boost for the NHS and said it brought Labour's extra investment in health to around pounds2bn since coming to power.

  • News

    19 March 1948

    1998-03-19T00:00:00Z

    The National Association of Administrators of Local Government Establishments has circulated a memo on the NHS Act and draft National Assistance Bill, which make provision for the 'sick' and 'normally healthy aged', leaving a residue which will be the responsibility of local authorities. This consists of the following classes:

  • News

    11th-hour attempts to save HIV/AIDS centre

    1998-03-19T00:00:00Z

    Last-ditch attempts to save a purpose-built centre for people with HIV and AIDS from being sold were being mounted this week.

  • News

    EVALUATING HEALTH INTERVENTIONS An introduction to evaluation of health treatments, services, policies and organisational interventions By John 0vretveit Open University Press 324 pages pounds55/pound

    1998-03-19T00:00:00Z

    There is increasing emphasis on the need to evaluate what we do and to ensure we do it in the most effective or cost-effective ways. Evidence- based healthcare has focused principally on clinical (especially medical) activities. But the way healthcare is organised, financed and managed may well have as much ...

  • News

    Sleeping It Off

    1998-03-05T00:00:00Z

    Sleeping It Off is one of 27 oil paintings by British artist Susan Macfarlane that seek to illustrate what it is like to live with childhood leukaemia. The paintings reveal a complex environment of laboratory testing and diagnosis, blood transfusion, the children's ward, radiotherapy, chemotherapy, bone marrow transplant and the ...

  • News

    REFERENCES

    1998-03-05T00:00:00Z

    1 Goudie F, Stokes G. The Community Assessment Project. Unpublished report for Coventry Health Authority, 1990.

  • News

    Police surgeon service needs 'urgent' updating

    1998-03-05T00:00:00Z

    The Audit Commission has called for 'urgent modernisation' of the police surgeon service.

  • News

    Monitor

    1998-03-05T00:00:00Z

    Monitor is delighted to see that the Institute of Health Services Managers is still at the cutting edge of research into management issues. To coincide with a 'merger mania' conference last week it issued a 'strictly embargoed' press statement detailing a survey of 'managers from across the NHS'. Its findings ...

  • News

    Mergers must have meaning

    1998-03-05T00:00:00Z

    We need to cure 'merger mania' - or more accurately, to take the mania out of mergers. In April, the first wave of trust mergers will kick- start radical change to the shape of acute services. Mergers have always been a political hot potato, causing local headaches for the government, ...

  • News

    Reassure public over MMR, managers told

    1998-03-05T00:00:00Z

    Matthew Poulter, who has autism, was 15 months old when he was vaccinated with MMR. His mother Rochelle, from Brighton, said: 'He had been a sociable child but his speech just stopped. He was not saying anything, just grunts and moans. I am convinced it was the MMR.' Matthew and ...

  • News

    Key Points

    1998-03-05T00:00:00Z

    The NHS's failure to use plain English is a long-standing and widely acknowledged problem.