All Patient safety articles – Page 253

  • News

    Former ambulance trust chief defends controversial style

    2008-04-17T09:00:00Z

    A former ambulance trust chief executive has hit back at a report in which staff branded him a 'benevolent dictator', under whose leadership targets were put before patient safety.

  • News

    Targets create ambulance staff tension

    2008-04-17T09:00:00Z

    Government targets and organisational change have been blamed for 'disappointing' staff survey results from ambulance trusts.

  • News

    Scotland asked to review ban on gay blood donors

    2008-04-16T14:14:00Z

    Liberal Democrat health spokesman Ross Finnie has urged the Scottish government to examine whether the blanket ban on gay men donating blood could be lifted without compromising public safety.

  • News

    Employ more cleaners to fight infections, hospitals told

    2008-04-15T11:53:00Z

    Unison has called for minimum staffing levels to be set for hospital cleaning to help combat infections.The union says hospitals need to employ two cleaners per shift for every 30 patients from 8am to 9pm.

  • News

    Shrinking office space risks patient confidentiality

    2008-04-14T12:22:00Z

    Doctors have less office space than a year ago and over half of doctors say they do not have adequate office resources, according to a survey by the British Medical Association.

  • News

    Staffordshire ambulance safety warning

    2008-04-10T12:00:00Z

    Staffordshire Ambulance Service trust took risks with the safety of patients, staff and volunteers, the Healthcare Commission has found.In an investigation covering April 2004 to June 2007, the commission found problems relating to the poor management of controlled drugs, emergency ambulance volunteers and its out-of-hours GP service.

  • News

    Staff survey shows low opinion of senior management

    2008-04-10T09:00:00Z

    Trusts have been urged to address a ‘breakdown’ in the relationship between senior managers and staff, following the results of the fifth annual NHS staff survey.It is the first time the Healthcare Commission’s survey of every trust in England has asked specific questions about senior management.

  • News

    Gibb sues former employer

    2008-04-10T09:00:00Z

    Rose Gibb, the former chief executive who received a £75,000 pay-off after presiding over a fatal infection outbreak, was prepared to 'stay and face the music', according to her trade union. She is suing her former employer for a further £175,000 plus interest, claiming she was forced to leave.

  • News

    Patient safety tops list of complaints to Healthcare Commission

    2008-04-10T09:00:00Z

    Patient safety has emerged as the biggest area of concern in complaints that are handled by the Healthcare Commission.

  • News

    Concern at slow response to review of brutal murder

    2008-04-10T09:00:00Z

    The chair of an inquiry into the brutal murder of a man with learning disabilities has said she is 'hugely disappointed' by the NHS's failure to address the problems it identified.

  • Comment

    Michael White on biosimilars and generics

    2008-04-10T09:00:00Z

    At my bus-pass holding time of life, you don't often come across a word whose meaning you could no more guess at than a street sign in Tokyo. It happened to me when trawling Hansard the other day. The word was 'biosimilars'.

  • Comment

    Media Watch: anti-infection alligators

    2008-04-10T09:00:00Z

    The leech has long been recognised as the doctor's friend. Now another swamp creature is crawling to the forefront of healthcare.

  • News

    Staff survey points to poor communication

    2008-04-09T12:00:00Z

    The views of thousands of NHS employees have been published in the Healthcare Commission's fifth annual staff survey.The survey reveals that, while staff are generally satisfied in their jobs, communication with senior management is often seen as poor.

  • Comment

    How the NHS is failing vulnerable adults

    2008-04-08T10:00:00Z

    What does the murder of a man with a learning disability have to do with the NHS? Not as much as it should, according to Margaret Flynn, who conducted an official inquiry into the death of Steven Hoskin in Cornwall

  • HSJ Partners

    Northern Ireland welcomes patient safety collaboration

    2008-04-08T09:00:00Z

    Northern Ireland'schief medical officer Dr Michael McBride has welcomed the Northern Ireland Safety Forum's collaboration with the Health Foundation.

  • HSJ Partners

    New patient safety briefing available

    2008-04-08T09:00:00Z

    The Health Foundation has released an update on the lessons learned from its Safer Patients Initiative.

  • News

    Corporate manslaughter law comes into force

    2008-04-07T12:29:00Z

    The Corporate Manslaughter and Corporate Homicide Act 2007 came into effect yesterday.Under the act, companies and organisations can be prosecuted if serious failures in the management of health and safety result in a fatality.

  • News

    Focus on hospital infections 'misguided'

    2008-04-04T12:29:00Z

    The focus on MRSA infections in hospital is misguided, an expert from the London School of Hygiene and Tropical Medicine has said.Professor Sally Bloomfield has said that attention should also be paid to better hygiene standards in people's homes, to reduce the risk of people taking infections into hospitals when ...

  • HSJ Knowledge

    Improving patient safety through crucial conversations

    2008-04-04T09:00:00Z

    Holding crucial conversations - emotional and risky discussions - is key to improving patient safety, reducing errors, improving morale and reducing staff turnover, explains Richard Pound

  • News

    Adverse drug reactions cost £2bn a year, pressure group claims

    2008-04-03T13:28:00Z

    Dealing with adverse reactions to prescribed drugs costs the NHS £1.9bn a year, the pressure group Compass has claimed.