Wednesday, 12 September 2012

Trust chief executive Lyn Hill-Tout said she welcomed working with Monitor


Rescue package for troubled Mid Staffordshire NHS Trust

Lyn Hill-Tout

Related Stories

A rescue package is being drawn up for a hospital trust accused of "appalling standards of care" three years ago.
Independent experts will look at a long-term solution for patients using Mid Staffordshire NHS Foundation Trust, health service watchdog Monitor said.
The watchdog, which oversees finance and management, said clinical care has improved but needs to be made sustainable.
Experts will look at how services can be made viable.
Financial advisors, accountants, administrative and legal service firms will form part of the team recommending how services should be run.
'Deeply dysfunctional'
Monitor said the body had an "open mind" about what solutions would be reached but suggested a solvent restructuring of the trust or possibly putting it in special administration could be options.
A final report will be delivered to Monitor in spring 2013.
The trust looks after Stafford and Cannock Chase Hospitals.
A 2009 Healthcare Commission report revealed a higher than expected number of deaths at Stafford Hospital.

Analysis

After the placing of South London Healthcare into administration in July, this is another significant step for the NHS.
The decision by the health secretary two months ago was a first for the health service and could lead to that trust being broken up and services closed.
Mid Staffordshire is a foundation trust so this option is not open to ministers or regulators - yet.
But come April Monitor will have the powers to take the same step and so by announcing troubleshooters will be brought in Monitor has paved the way for that to happen.
It will not be the first time that outside experts have been asked to assess the governance and finances of an NHS trust.
But it is the first time they will have the remit to recommend administration for a foundation trust.
It is another sign that in the current financial climate tough action will be taken against struggling trusts.
A public inquiry into the role of regulators in the lead up to the critical report is set to report later this year.
The A&E unit is also temporarily shut at night and earlier this month an NHS report criticised the standard of breast cancer care, describing the set-up as "deeply dysfunctional".
A contingency planning team will work with local commissioners and clinicians, Monitor said.
Dr David Bennett, chair and interim chief executive of Monitor, said: "We have been working closely with Mid Staffordshire NHS Foundation Trust to improve its performance.
"It has made significant improvements in the clinical care provided for patients, but we need to make sure these services can be secured in the long-term.
"It is therefore time for us as the sector regulator to step in and look for a solution that ensures services are provided for local patients on a sustainable basis.
"We have an open mind about the form that solution might take, but it should be the best one for patients in the long term."
Lyn Hill-Tout, the trust's chief executive, said she welcomed working with Monitor so "clear decisions" could be made.
She said: "Reviews of the trust over the last few years and the changes to the way healthcare has begun to be provided nationally have led to a growing feeling of uncertainty about the future of the two hospitals."
Dr David Bennett: "We are open minded about what is the right answer"
In July a new medical director took over at the trust replacing Manjit Obhrai, who was brought in three years ago to improve standards.
At the same time, the Care Quality Commission lifted all of its previous concerns regarding the hospital, saying all "essential standards" were being met.
A Department of Health spokeswoman said the hospitals trust was "still facing serious financial challenges".
She added: "This puts at risk its work on improving services for patients.
"It is important that valued local services are sustainable and able to continue providing high quality treatment and advice for patients."

More on This Story

Related Stories

The BBC is not responsible for the content of external Internet sites

Tuesday, 11 September 2012

WESTOFMENGELE: Black Death genetic code 'built'

WESTOFMENGELE: Black Death genetic code 'built'

Areas of Somerset and Gloucestershire are designated as badger killing areas, pending an Appeal Court hearing next month

  1.  badger vaccine gloucestershire

    England badger cull court appeal


    1. BBC News‎ - 12 hours ago
      Dr Gordon McGlone of the Gloucestershire Wildlife Trust argues that the vaccination of badgers is a better alternative in the control of cattle TB.Published on Tuesday 28 August 2012 15:36
      A four-year programme to vaccinate Somerset badgers against bovine TB (bTB) has begun.
      The project is part of a nationwide initiative by badger groups to offer vaccination opportunities to farmers and landowners.
      Areas of Somerset and Gloucestershire are designated as badger killing areas, pending an Appeal Court hearing next month, and Adrian Coward, chairman of Somerset Badger Group (SBG) said: “Our members are delighted to be working alongside farmers. On behalf of the badgers and farmers we want to take advantage of the recently licensed vaccine to help constructively with the battle against bTB.
      “During field trials the vaccine has been proved to be effective in at least 74% of badgers vaccinated. It is the modern, scientific way to conquer the disease and –unlike culling--does not carry the risk of causing infection to spread”.
      SBG are carrying out the work in association with Secret World Wildlife Rescue of Highbridge, Somerset, supported by the Badger Trust and Network for Animals. Licensed members and volunteers place peanuts in open cage traps for several nights to familiarise the badgers with the traps before setting the catches which close the traps as badgers enter. Within hours, at first light, the trapped badgers are given a health and condition check, vaccinated, marked and released without harm. Farms will be revisited at regular intervals to increase the proportion of badgers vaccinated.
      Badgers are highly territorial. Research has shown that badgers which survive a cull wander much more widely, increasing the possibility of disease spread. The phenomena is known as perturbation. Vaccination has no such disadvantage. The badgers remain in their home ranges, preventing others from moving in from neighbouring areas.
      Perturbation with its worsening of disease was so marked in the £50million Randomised Badger Culling Trials that in 2003 the then government suspended localised (“reactive”) killing of badgers.
      Vaccination by licensed members of badger groups began last autumn coordinated by Trust director Simon Boulter. Specially-trained leaders and volunteers established procedures in the field monitored and approved by senior Defra veterinary staff. Badgers on farms in Worcestershire, Derbyshire, Devon, Cornwall, Oxfordshire and Buckinghamshire have already been vaccinated by badger group members.
      The Badger Trust says perturbation is likely to follow the proposed “free shooting” of badgers.























increasing vitamin intake


'Super soup' test in asthma trial

Asthma inhaler dispensing a dose of medicationThere are more than five million people in the UK who suffer from asthma

Related Stories

Scientists are to begin clinical trials to determine if eating more foods rich in vitamin E during pregnancy prevents childhood asthma.
Women will eat soups naturally high in the vitamin, which it is believed may promote lung growth in the developing foetus.
Children born with good lung function are less likely to develop asthma.
Details of the trial were outlined at the British Science Festival being held in Aberdeen.
Asthma is highly prevalent - in the UK, 10-15% of children and 5-10% of adults have been diagnosed with the disease.
The majority of children with asthma will carry the illness into adulthood.
The disease is managed by preventing and relieving the major symptoms - breathlessness, wheezing and coughing - using inhalers and, in extreme cases, with steroid tablets.
There has been a recent increase in the prevalence of asthma in children.
To try to understand why, a team of researchers from the University of Aberdeen established a cohort of approximately 2,000 women and measured the impact of diet on the incidence of asthma in children up to the age of five.
Prof Graham Deveraux, who led the study, said: "We were able to show, for the first time, that children born to mums with a lower vitamin E intake during pregnancy were more likely to develop asthma by the age of five and have poor lung function."
These early findings were then confirmed in studies carried out in Japan and the US.
The next challenge for the researchers was to show that altering nutrition during pregnancy could positively impact on a child's susceptibility to asthma.
Avoiding potions and pills
Prof Deveraux considered that a trial using vitamin supplements lacked credibility - trials of vitamins to treat various conditions had so-often failed.
He said the key may be intake in food.
"People have never actually eaten vitamin E tablets; normally most people get their vitamin E from food.
"I wondered whether it might be the other nutrients that go with vitamin E in food that may be responsible for the effect. There may be interactions between vitamin E and the other nutrients.
"So, I was very keen to do a dietary intervention rather than a pill or a potion."
With the help of a team of dietitians, he performed a small study on pregnant women to see if he could manipulate their diet to increase their vitamin E intake up to the recommended levels and, he says, "it worked a treat".
But vitamin E was not the only thing that altered, as Prof Deveraux observed: "Lots of other things changed, like the fatty acids changed, the zinc changed, the selenium, the vitamin D - and all these are nutrients which we know have been associated during pregnancy with childhood asthma."
Whilst the results vindicated their overall approach, the dietary interventions were too complex and would not be readily accessible to a wide range of society. Also it was difficult to standardise and control.
Super soups
To overcome these problems, the team approached a commercial soup manufacturer to develop a range of enhanced soups. Each one is naturally rich in vitamin E - and other potentially important minerals - and for each there is a similarly tasting "normal" soup that could be used for the control group of pregnant women.
By judicious tweaking of ingredients - for example, substituting normal tomatoes found in cream of tomato soup with their super-nutritious sun-dried counterparts - they were able to develop three new varieties of "super-soups".
The team now plan to test the soups in a small pilot study involving 50 women. They will be enrolled during early pregnancy and asked to eat either enriched or normal soup three times a week.
The study will show whether the new dietary intervention is well tolerated by the women and - by carrying out blood measurements - if it has the desired effect on vitamin intake.
They might also get an early indication that the approach could prevent asthma. "If we're really lucky we might show that the children [born to women] receiving vitamin E enhancement may actually have better lung function," Prof Deveraux commented.
The overall approach has support from both nutritionists and asthma experts.
Prof Maijaliisa Erkkola, from the University of Helsinki, told BBC News: "Appropriate food-based strategies that could contribute to reducing low maternal intakes of vitamin E to prevent asthma in offspring and to improve health of children are welcome."
Whilst Prof Ian Hall, from the University of Nottingham and an expert on asthma, told us: "In general these studies [using diet supplement tablets] have been disappointing in that they have failed to show reductions in the risk of developing asthma in the treated subjects.
"The current study adopts a novel approach by using natural supplementation in soup rather than a tablet based approach: it will be interesting to see if this proves more successful".
If the pilot study is successful in its primary aim - increasing vitamin intake - then Prof Deveraux and his team plan to carry out a much larger trial in over 1,000 women.

More on This Story

Related Stories

The BBC is not responsible for the content of external Internet sites

increasing vitamin intake


'Super soup' test in asthma trial

Asthma inhaler dispensing a dose of medicationThere are more than five million people in the UK who suffer from asthma

Related Stories

Scientists are to begin clinical trials to determine if eating more foods rich in vitamin E during pregnancy prevents childhood asthma.
Women will eat soups naturally high in the vitamin, which it is believed may promote lung growth in the developing foetus.
Children born with good lung function are less likely to develop asthma.
Details of the trial were outlined at the British Science Festival being held in Aberdeen.
Asthma is highly prevalent - in the UK, 10-15% of children and 5-10% of adults have been diagnosed with the disease.
The majority of children with asthma will carry the illness into adulthood.
The disease is managed by preventing and relieving the major symptoms - breathlessness, wheezing and coughing - using inhalers and, in extreme cases, with steroid tablets.
There has been a recent increase in the prevalence of asthma in children.
To try to understand why, a team of researchers from the University of Aberdeen established a cohort of approximately 2,000 women and measured the impact of diet on the incidence of asthma in children up to the age of five.
Prof Graham Deveraux, who led the study, said: "We were able to show, for the first time, that children born to mums with a lower vitamin E intake during pregnancy were more likely to develop asthma by the age of five and have poor lung function."
These early findings were then confirmed in studies carried out in Japan and the US.
The next challenge for the researchers was to show that altering nutrition during pregnancy could positively impact on a child's susceptibility to asthma.
Avoiding potions and pills
Prof Deveraux considered that a trial using vitamin supplements lacked credibility - trials of vitamins to treat various conditions had so-often failed.
He said the key may be intake in food.
"People have never actually eaten vitamin E tablets; normally most people get their vitamin E from food.
"I wondered whether it might be the other nutrients that go with vitamin E in food that may be responsible for the effect. There may be interactions between vitamin E and the other nutrients.
"So, I was very keen to do a dietary intervention rather than a pill or a potion."
With the help of a team of dietitians, he performed a small study on pregnant women to see if he could manipulate their diet to increase their vitamin E intake up to the recommended levels and, he says, "it worked a treat".
But vitamin E was not the only thing that altered, as Prof Deveraux observed: "Lots of other things changed, like the fatty acids changed, the zinc changed, the selenium, the vitamin D - and all these are nutrients which we know have been associated during pregnancy with childhood asthma."
Whilst the results vindicated their overall approach, the dietary interventions were too complex and would not be readily accessible to a wide range of society. Also it was difficult to standardise and control.
Super soups
To overcome these problems, the team approached a commercial soup manufacturer to develop a range of enhanced soups. Each one is naturally rich in vitamin E - and other potentially important minerals - and for each there is a similarly tasting "normal" soup that could be used for the control group of pregnant women.
By judicious tweaking of ingredients - for example, substituting normal tomatoes found in cream of tomato soup with their super-nutritious sun-dried counterparts - they were able to develop three new varieties of "super-soups".
The team now plan to test the soups in a small pilot study involving 50 women. They will be enrolled during early pregnancy and asked to eat either enriched or normal soup three times a week.
The study will show whether the new dietary intervention is well tolerated by the women and - by carrying out blood measurements - if it has the desired effect on vitamin intake.
They might also get an early indication that the approach could prevent asthma. "If we're really lucky we might show that the children [born to women] receiving vitamin E enhancement may actually have better lung function," Prof Deveraux commented.
The overall approach has support from both nutritionists and asthma experts.
Prof Maijaliisa Erkkola, from the University of Helsinki, told BBC News: "Appropriate food-based strategies that could contribute to reducing low maternal intakes of vitamin E to prevent asthma in offspring and to improve health of children are welcome."
Whilst Prof Ian Hall, from the University of Nottingham and an expert on asthma, told us: "In general these studies [using diet supplement tablets] have been disappointing in that they have failed to show reductions in the risk of developing asthma in the treated subjects.
"The current study adopts a novel approach by using natural supplementation in soup rather than a tablet based approach: it will be interesting to see if this proves more successful".
If the pilot study is successful in its primary aim - increasing vitamin intake - then Prof Deveraux and his team plan to carry out a much larger trial in over 1,000 women.

More on This Story

Related Stories

The BBC is not responsible for the content of external Internet sites

Carbon emissions linked to Europe's hay fever rise


Carbon emissions linked to Europe's hay fever rise

Pollen from catkinsThe pollen season is getting longer in Europe, partly influenced by climate change

Related Stories

Carbon dioxide emissions may be raising pollen counts in European cities, according to a continent-wide study.
Researchers from 13 EU nations analysed pollen levels for more than 20 species of tree and plant.
They found that many, including several that cause allergies such as hay fever, correlated with rising CO2 levels.
Presenting their study at the European Geosciences Union (EGU) annual meeting, scientists said city planners might need to review which trees they plant.
Hay fever and other allergies appear to be rising across Europe.
In the UK, GP diagnoses of allergic rhinitis, which includes hay fever, rose by a third between 2001 and 2005.
It has been suggested that higher temperatures might be causing plants to produce more pollen.
But by comparing pollen counts during relatively hotter and relatively cooler years, this latest study found temperature was not the cause.
Annette Menzel from the Technical University of Munich said other possible factors were eliminated as well.
"We thought the increase in the amount of pollen could be related to land use changes, but we don't observe this," she told BBC News.
"We tried to link it to temperature, but that's not possible.
"So the only effect that's left would be a CO2 effect; and we know from experiments in the real world and in climate chambers that CO2 does promote the amount of pollen [that trees produce]."
Urban conundrum

Start Quote

The season of suffering for people with hay fever is getting more serious”
Annette MenzelTechnical University of Munich
Data in the study came from pollen monitoring stations in the 13 nations, supplemented by tree cover information from the UN Food and Agriculture Organization and weather data.
Not all the 25 species studied show the same trend - pollen counts from some have actually gone down.
But 60% of species have seen an increase in pollen production across the decades of the study period, including nine species known to produce allergenic pollen.
There were also differences between trends in different countries, with pollen counts falling in a few.
Perhaps the most intriguing finding was that pollen counts have generally increased with CO2 inside cities, but not outside.
The researchers suggest this could be down to the longer lifetime of ozone molecules outside urban areas.
Pollen grains under a microscopePollen causes inflammation of the air passages by stimulating the immune system
The gas is known to disrupt plant growth.
Although more research remains to be done, Professor Menzel's team suggests further rises in pollen counts probably lie ahead, given that CO2 concentrations are rising.
The increasing length of pollen seasons in Europe is linked to the introduction of plants and trees from other continents, in addition to any impact of CO2.
"In Germany, it is now only in November that we do not see allergenic pollen - so the season of suffering for people with hay fever is getting more serious," she said.
"On a local scale, planners should be more aware of what sort of problems may arise from the urban trees they're planting.
"Often they use birch trees, for example, because of their nice silver colour, not aware that they leave allergenic problems behind."
Many of the researchers on this project are involved in wider efforts to plot climate impacts on the timing of natural events such as plant flowering, egg laying and bird migration across Europe - the field of phenology.
The hay fever research presented at EGU will shortly be written up for formal scientific publication.

More on This Story

Related Stories

The BBC is not responsible for the content of external Internet sites

Hay fever vaccine


Hay fever vaccine: New method could be 'cheaper and better'


Sneezing through summer with a runny nose could become a thing of the past if researchers in London are successful at developing a new hay fever vaccine.
The researchers, at Imperial College London and King's College London, say their "targeted" approach could lead to a cheaper and more effective vaccine.
In tests, they have injected into a layer of skin on patients they think is a "hotline" to the immune system.
Allergy UK said it was a very exciting development.
Treatment for hay fever is largely through drugs such as antihistamines or steroids. In very severe cases, tablets or injections of pollen under the skin can be given. The doses are gradually increased over three years to boost tolerance to pollen. However, the treatment is expensive.
The research team are trying much shallower injections into a part of the skin packed with white blood cells, part of the immune system. They argue their targeted approach means they can use tiny amounts of pollen - their dose is 2,000 times smaller than current injections - and also need fewer injections.
"It is a totally different route," Dr Stephen Till told the BBC. "The injections are very, very superficial almost flat against the skin."
Improvement
The results of early tests on 30 patients, published in Journal of Allergy and Clinical Immunology, suggested the allergic reaction to grass pollen decreased with the vaccine.
A third of the patients were given six injections a fortnight apart. Initially the injection resulted in a large lump on the skin, but over time the size of the lump decreased.
The researchers said this suggested the allergic reaction to grass pollen was being switched off.
They are now starting a clinical trial with 90 patients to see if the vaccine can also reduce other symptoms such as sneezing.

Dr Till said: "If this approach proves to be effective it would define a new scientific and clinical principle that could also be applied to other allergic diseases such as asthma and food allergies.
"This could be a pivotal study in immunological research."
Maureen Jenkins, the director of clinical services at the charity Allergy UK, said this was a "very exciting development" which "offers hope for sufferers".
She added: "The proposed vaccine, if successful, is much quicker and more straightforward than current immunotherapy treatment for hay fever, which takes years. It also has the potential to offer cost savings.
"If this series of injections proves effective in combating hay fever, it will be a wonderful step forward in tackling this common, but often underestimated allergy."
A separate vaccine would have to be developed to help people with allergies to tree pollen.

Featured post

More patients in Scotland given antidepressants

More patients in Scotland given antidepressants 13 October 2015   From the section Scotland Image copyright Thinkstock Image ca...