All Public health articles – Page 143

  • News

    World Health Organisation makes flu vaccine warning

    2006-10-24T00:00:00Z

    Immediate and sustained action and funding is needed if the world is to be prepared for an influenza pandemic, the World Health Organisation has said. The organisation said stocks of influenza vaccines were several billion doses short and could lead to a public health crisis ...

  • News

    More long-term contraceptives being used

    2006-10-24T00:00:00Z

    One in five women are using long acting reversible contraception such as implants and the contraceptive jab, according to research by The Information Centre for health and social care. There has been a massive increase in the numbers of women using the intrauterine system and ...

  • News

    New head of policy at ASH

    2006-10-20T12:00:00Z

    Asthma UK policy and campaigns director Martin Dockrell has been appointed as the new head of policy at pressure group Action on Smoking and Health. Mr Dockrell was an AIDS activist in the 1980s and 1990s. For the last five years he has worked closely ...

  • HSJ Knowledge

    The Health of Minority Ethnic Groups

    2006-10-20T00:00:00Z

    Document from the Office of National Statistics, based on the 2004 Health Survey for England, and published in April 2006. It examines a range of health indicators among ethnic minority populations, including blood pressure, exercise levels, smoking and alcohol use, and obesity. Among the findings: diabetes was almost four times ...

  • HSJ Knowledge

    Statistics on Alcohol: England, 2006

    2006-10-20T00:00:00Z

    Document from the National Office of Statistics, published in July 2006, on alcohol use and misuse, examining drinking among school pupils, adults, and a survey of drinking-related ill-health, and country-wide economic costs. Among the report?s findings: 74 per cent of men and 59 per cent of women reported drinking an ...

  • HSJ Knowledge

    NHS Immunisation Statistics, England: 2004-05

    2006-10-20T00:00:00Z

    Office of National Statistics report, published in September 2005, on vaccines uptake among children: MMR vaccine uptake rose slightly year-on-year, uptake of vaccines for dipththeria, tetanus, etc remained stable at 93 per cent.

  • HSJ Knowledge

    Gender-specific services: equal, but not the same

    2006-10-19T00:00:00Z

    From next April, trusts will have a legal duty to demonstrate gender equity across all areas of service provision. But as the deadline approaches, the national picture is looking decidedly patchy. Gabriel Fleming looks at how it will work

  • News

    DoH pledges support teams

    2006-10-19T00:00:00Z

    The Department of Health is to create a national support team to help primary care trusts and local authorities tackle public health.

  • Comment

    Outspoken Wanless returns to judge a dream deferred

    2006-10-19T00:00:00Z

    It comes as no surprise that Sir Derek Wanless believes that the promise laid out in his seminal 2002 report is becoming a dream deferred.

  • HSJ Knowledge

    News analysis: Five years and billions of pounds later, what has changed since Wanless?

    2006-10-19T00:00:00Z

    Sir Derek Wanless's 2002 report prompted the chancellor to pump billions into the health service - but called for reform too. Now he is back to pack another punch by examining how wisely the money was spent and set out lessons for the future. Daniel Martin reports

  • News

    Wanless warning: future of NHS hangs on obesity action

    2006-10-19T00:00:00Z

    The government has failed to tackle obesity - and unless it does so, the future of the NHS hangs in the balance, says the man who persuaded ministers to pump record sums into the service.

  • News

    Conservative conference: charities push for changes to GP incentive framework

    2006-10-12T00:00:00Z

    Two charities are planning to launch a campaign to push for GPs' incentive payments to be based much more on their success in improving public health.

  • HSJ Knowledge

    'It's not about Americans in 10-gallon hats'

    2006-10-05T12:00:00Z

    While North Eastern Derbyshire primary care trust's decision to award an APMS contract to UnitedHealth Europe ended in the High Court, at neighbouring Central and Greater Derby PCTs managers are confident that UHE will meet local people's needs. Lynne Greenwood reports

  • Comment

    David Woodhead on gardening for the mind

    2006-10-05T00:00:00Z

    'She was clear that picking up a spade and plunging it into the ground enabled her to channel some of the anger she had felt the previous week at work.'

  • News

    Charles Core on Hepatitis C

    2006-09-28T00:00:00Z

    1 October brings World Hepatitis Awareness Day, but on the domestic stage the NHS is struggling to cope, writes Charles Gore

  • News

    Flint says 'one size fits all strategy' will never win public health war

    2006-09-28T00:00:00Z

    National public health campaigns could contribute to a further widening of health inequalities, a public health minister has warned.

  • News

    Deprived areas score best at smoking cessation

    2006-09-21T00:00:00Z

    Primary care trusts show wide variations in the implementation of their smoking-cessation services, and many have not consulted with patients and the public, says the Healthcare Commission.

  • News

    More addicts getting help

    2006-09-14T00:00:00Z

    More drug users are getting treatment but the standard of it is still highly variable, a Healthcare Commission report has concluded.

  • News

    News analysis: Obesity - private clubs help PCTs achieve the figures they want

    2006-09-14T00:00:00Z

    Referring overweight patients from GPs to the independent sector is a controversial approach but for many, joining a commercial group proves more effective in losing weight than drug treatment. Tash Shifrin reports on how 'slimming on referral' is working

  • Comment

    Why the NHS must wake up to the medical technology gap

    2006-09-07T12:00:00Z

    If the UK is to match other advanced countries, major investment in technology is essential. But predicting real demand can be difficult. Joe Rafferty and colleagues may have the answer