Showing posts with label NHS: Elderly care. Show all posts
Showing posts with label NHS: Elderly care. Show all posts

Sunday 2 September 2012

NHS announces new deadline to register claims For cases during the period 1st April 2004 – 31st March 2011 the deadline for individuals or their families and representatives to notify the relevant PCT will be 30th September 2012. For cases during the period 1st April 2011 – 31st March 2012 the deadline for individuals or their families and representatives to notify the relevant PCT will be 31st March 2013



NHS announces new deadline to register claimsFor cases during the period 1st April 2004 – 31st March 2011 the deadline for individuals or their families and representatives to notify the relevant PCT will be 30th September 2012.For cases during the period 1st April 2011 – 31st March 2012 the deadline for individuals or their families and representatives to notify the relevant PCT will be 31st March 2013

Wednesday 22 August 2012

NHS hospital trusts invited to expand abroad


NHS hospital trusts invited to expand abroad

NHS staff from Great Ormond Street Hospital took part in the London 2012 Olympic Opening Ceremony

An agency will aim to link hospitals such as Great Ormond Street with foreign governments that want access to British-run health services.
High-profile NHS hospitals in England are to be encouraged by the government to set up profit-making branches abroad to help fund services in the UK.
Investment would have to be drawn from hospitals' private UK work, but with profits ploughed back into the NHS.
A patients' group said the move was a "distraction" at a time of "upheaval".
The drive, building on an initiative first started under the Labour government, is set to be launched by the Department of Health and UK Trade and Investment this autumn.
The BBC understands the initiative is unlikely to involve regular district or general hospitals but would target world-renowned hospitals like the Royal Marsden, Great Ormond Street and Guy's and St Thomas'.

David Stou

'Benefit patients'
NHS staff taking part in the London 2012 Olympic opening ceremony It would mirror schemes such as that of Moorfields Eye Hospital in London, which in 2007 built a unit of the same name in Dubai. Children's hospital Great Ormond Street also has interests abroad.
In 2010, Labour's Health Secretary Andy Burnham set up NHS Global to help the health service make the most of the global market for healthcare and the coalition now wants to build on this.
A source close to current Health Secretary Andrew Lansley emphasised that hospitals would be able to pay for their investments abroad using only revenue generated from their private patients in the UK.
Any profits made overseas would be ploughed back into the health service and so benefit NHS patients, the source added.
The Health and Social Care Act, which was passed by Parliament earlier this year, eased the way for hospital trusts to expand their work in the private sector.
Health Minister Anne Milton said: "This is good news for NHS patients who will get better services at their local hospital as a result of the work the NHS is doing abroad and the extra investment that will generate.
"This is also good news for the economy, which will benefit from the extra jobs and revenue created by our highly successful life sciences industries as they trade more across the globe.
"The NHS has a world-class reputation, and this exciting development will make the most of that to deliver real benefits for both patients and taxpayers."
Moorfields medical director Chris Canning said no taxpayers' money had been spent on its Dubai venture and it had been in profit for the past three years while "raising the reputation and profile" of the NHS and the hospital, and making money to reinvest in UK health services.
David Stout, deputy chief executive of the NHS Confederation, which represents organisations around England, denied the scheme would divert attention away from health services and said an international exchange of ideas could in fact improve local services.
"This is not about distorting what the NHS offers to UK citizens, this is about how we can exploit the brand of the NHS internationally," he told BBC Radio 4's Today Programme.
When asked if the NHS could end up under-funded by taxation because of increasing funds raised abroad, he said: "We are not talking about completely skewing the way the health service funding comes in - this will be marginal in the scheme of a £100bn organisation organisation in the NHS."
'Rampant commercialisation'
However, the move was criticised by the Patients Association.
"The key and only focus of an NHS hospital should be to provide treatment to patients on the NHS. We would be very concerned by any moves which would see commercial ventures, which are naturally going to be important for hospitals because they need to use them to raise revenue, would simply result in the attention of the hospitals being taken away from the core purpose - to treat patients in the UK and instead be focused on these hospitals abroad," said Michael Watson, of the group.
Andy Burnham, Labour: "The government's plan fundamentally alters the character of the NHS"
Labour began the initiative while in government, but shadow health minister Jamie Reed criticised the coalition's plans.
He said: "At a time when staff are losing their jobs and waiting times are rising, the government's priority should be sorting out the mess it has created in our NHS.
"Under David Cameron we're seeing a rampant commercialisation of the NHS. He needs to get a grip and start focusing on patients, not profits."

Wednesday 16 November 2011

NHS: Elderly care dossier shows 'shameful attitudes'


NHS: Elderly care dossier shows 'shameful attitudes'


Nurse and patientAttitudes to elderly people in the NHS are shameful, says the Patients Association

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A dossier containing "shameful" stories about the care elderly patients receive in NHS hospitals in England has been published by campaigners.
The Patients Association said the 16 cases include people being denied pain relief, left to sit in their own faeces and going without food and drink.
It comes after criticism from other groups and the charity said it was highlighting the tip of the iceberg.
The government said it was determined to "root out poor performance".
A programme of unannounced inspections would continue, the Department of Health added.
Last month the Care Quality Commission attacked hospitals for what the regulator said were "alarming" levels of care.
The Health Service Ombudsman also raised concerns about the issue in February, reporting that nearly a fifth of complaints it got were related to the care of the elderly.
As well as highlighting the 16 cases, the Patients Association said the number of calls to its helpline regarding care on hospital wards had already hit 961 this year - a third more than the total made throughout the whole of 2010.

Left sitting in faeces

George Taylor was admitted to Chase Farm Hospital in London in August with a urinary tract infection and chest problem. His family said he received a shocking level of care while there.
On one day, he was told by a nurse to go to the toilet sitting in his chair because she did not have time to take him to a bathroom. He did and his family then found him sitting in his own faeces. His wife had to clean him up.
His family also said he was often not washed, and the smell became overpowering at times. He was also discharged too early and was soon admitted to another hospital, where doctors said he should not have been released at all.
Mr Taylor's daughter, Gaynor Marshall, said: "The nursing staff treated him as an object that they had to treat rather than a human being." A complaint has now been made about his care.
The Patients Association said the failings fell into four broad categories - communication, assistance going to the toilet, pain relief and nutrition.
And it called on NHS trusts to sign up to a pledge to ensure these four areas of care become top priorities.
It said responsibility for the problems lay with everyone from individual staff on the wards to senior managers on the board.
Among the cases highlighted are a patient who was left sitting in his own faeces for hours after a nurse told him he should empty his bowels in his chair because she did not have time to help him go to the toilet.
In another case, a family of a patient had to beg for pain relief for a dying woman before waiting for nearly two hours for help to arrive.
And one man had to wait for 15 minutes to have his call buzzer answered despite having to desperately struggle for breath.
It is the third time the Patients Association has published individual stories like this.
'Poor performance'
Katherine Murphy, the charity's chief executive, said: "We cannot ignore the fact that some trusts are not even paying lip service to the fundamentals of care.

Dying patient in 'terrible' pain

Sally Abbott-Sienkiewicz
Sally Abbott-Sienkiewicz was admitted to Glenfield Hospital in Leicester in November last year. She was terminally ill with cancer and had developed pneumonia. She died within two days.
But throughout her time there, her family had to battle to get her pain relief. They said she was left in terrible pain - sometimes for more than an hour - as they argued with staff to give her sedatives. The worst problems were experienced during the night.
Her daughter Samantha White said at times her pain was "horrendous and horrific", but staff were too slow to react.
Suzanne Hinchliffe, chief nurse at the trust which runs Glenfield, said: "It is clear that we completely failed Mrs Abbott-Sienkiewicz and her family, and for that we remain very sorry." She added that measures were being taken to improve practices.
"The issues we continue to highlight are human rights issues. They show a lack of compassion and care and a shameful attitude to treatment of the elderly."
Peter Carter, general secretary of the Royal College of Nursing, said the patients had been "clearly failed" in the cases highlighted.
"Each and every nurse is personally accountable for their own actions and must act promptly to raise concerns if staffing levels or other pressures get in the way of delivering good patient care."
But he also said managers must take responsibility, pointing out that job cuts were making it more difficult to provide good care.
The publication of the Patients Association report has also coincided with an announcement by the government that it is looking to improve standards for healthcare assistants, who are providing an increasing amount of care on wards.
These staff are currently unregulated, but the Department of Health is looking to introduce new rules by 2013 to ensure that they reach a minimum training levels before being allowed to work. However, indications are that this will be a voluntary requirement, which has disappointed some.
A spokesman for the Department of Health said: "The Patients Association is right to raise these examples and issues, and we will work with them and with the NHS to sort these problems out."

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