Showing posts with label Volume 5 Issue 23. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Volume 5 Issue 23. Show all posts

11 November 2009

ABOUT THIS BLOG

This bulletin highlights recently produced documents that have appeared on websites. The aim is to trawl the web and produce a fortnightly review of what is found (coverage may not be comprehensive). If you have any comments or suggestions regarding this Bulletin, please send an email to library.pct@sthk.nhs.uk. All links are correct at time of publishing. Some documents are large and may take time to open so please be patient when waiting for links to open. If a link is incorrect please email me and I will correct the link and send you the document.

For those that are receiving this through an email or through a third party you can view the original Bulletin at http://www.newdocumentsbulletin.blogspot.com/ and also sign up to receive the Bulletin by RSS.


ALCOHOL

Children, young people and alcohol: how they learn and how to prevent excessive use (30th October 2009)
A review of research into how young people learn to drink reveals that parents and alcohol's representation in the media have the strongest influence on drinking habits, whereas peers have the least. The report, published today (30 October) by the Joseph Rowntree Foundation, found that of all the methods which have been tried to encourage young people to drink responsibly, ones based on the family are the most effective.
Summary

Full Report Part One (Influences on how children and young people learn about and behave towards alcohol - a review of the literature)
Full Report Part Two (Alcohol prevention programmes - a review of the literature)

Alcohol Outcomes Star (4th November 2009)
Alcohol Concern has launched the Alcohol Star, a new version of the Outcomes star for alcohol misuse services.
Alcohol Outcomes Star: Organisation Guide
Alcohol Outcomes Star: Star Chart
Alcohol Outcomes Star: User Guide

Untold Damage. Children's accounts of living with harmful parental drinking (9th November 2009)
New research, carried out by Childline and Scottish Health Action on Alcohol Problems (SHAAP) highlights children's accounts of the severe negative impacts of harmful parental drinking on their lives including emotional stress, physical abuse and neglect.
Report

Alcohol Insight Number 65. The Orientation and Integration of Local and National Alcohol Policy in England and Wales (27th October 2009)
The study, from the Alcohol Education and Research Council (AERC), was multi-dimensional and employed qualitative documentary analysis and semi-structured interview methods to explore the roles, responsibilities and viewpoints of a range of stakeholders operating at the national or local level.
Report

ARTICLE - A randomized controlled trial of an internet-based intervention for alcohol abusers (9th November 2009)
This study looked at an internet-based intervention, with research evidence supporting its efficacy to reduce alcohol consumption. The conclusion was that the internet could increase the range of help-seeking options available because it takes treatment to the problem drinker rather than making the problem drinker come to the internet.
Article

BULLETINS/NEWSLETTERS


National Cancer Programme Bulletin, Issue 1, October 2009 (10th November 2009)

CANCER

National Bowel Cancer Audit 2009 (October 2009)
The information Centre has published the National Bowel Cancer Audit which presents findings on data collected for both the 2006/07 and 2007/08 reporting periods, and includes patients with a diagnosis date from 1 April 2006 to 31 July 2008. Among the recommendations are:
  • Trusts should establish mechanisms for reviewing their audit data and ensure maximum data completeness of the essential dataset
  • All bowel cancer patients should be seen by a clinical nurse specialist
  • Trusts and Networks should review their 30 day post operative mortality rates and explore significant variance from Network and national figures
  • Trust Service Improvement or Clinical Governance teams should utilise the draft National Bowel Cancer Audit local action plan in support of their service improvement, clinical governance and cancer peer review activity
  • Networks and Cancer Service Commissioners should use the findings of this report and its recommendations to support monitoring, review and contracting activity in relation to bowel cancer services.
Executive Summary
Report


National Mastectomy and Breast Reconstruction Audit 2009 (October 2009)
Figures from this audit reveal that just under half of women (48%) are being offered immediate breast reconstructive surgery when they have a mastectomy. 21% of women having a mastectomy as part of their treatment for breast choose to have the procedure.
Audit

Reviewing the Lung Cancer Plan: Are we emerging from the shadow of lung cancer>? (2nd November 2009)
The NHS is still failing lung cancer patients, according to the results of the first national review of lung cancer services, published today (2 November 2009) by the UK Lung Cancer Coalition. Despite headway in UK lung cancer prevention, disease awareness and screening, key areas such as diagnosis, treatment rates and access to specialists are still ‘woefully inadequate’ say the UK’s leading lung cancer experts.
Report

CARE QUALITY COMMISSION

Getting ready for registration (9th November 2009)
Legislation introducing a new registration system for all regulated health and adult social care services in England has now been laid before Parliament. To help care providers get ready for registration, the Care Quality Commission (CQC) have published three short guides:
  • A guide to the new system of registration
  • The scope of registration
  • NHS Trusts: how to apply for registration overview
Guides

CARE/CARERS

Dignity in care: input assessment - DH interventions (10th November 2009)
In May 2009, Opinion Leader were commissioned to undertake an independent review of the Dignity in Care Campaign.

The review aims to answer whether or not the campaign is making a difference to the way services are being provided and commissioned across health, social care, local authorities and the independent sector and the way people experience care.

One of the key objectives set out in the tender specification for the review, was to understand and describe from the viewpoints of a range of stakeholders, which specific interventions or activities at national or local level have worked or not worked well in the campaign and why.

This report sets out the range of interventions employed by DH in taking forward the Dignity in Care Campaign to support Opinion Leader’s analysis of interventions at a national level.
Report

The real cost of quality care and support (9th November 2009)
The research report, The real cost of quality care and support, is published by the National Care Forum and Counsel and Care as a response to the green paper on the future funding of care. The two organisations say that more resources are needed to fund better quality care.

The report found that care services with high star ratings spend up to 20% more on staff and their training, development and management, as well as putting service users at the centre of everything they do. Not-for-profit providers consistently get better quality ratings.
Report

CHILDREN/YOUNG PEOPLE

ARTICLE - Pediatric Gastroesophageal Reflux Clinical Practice Guidelines: Joint Recommendations of the North American Society for Pediatric Gastroenterology, Hepatology and Nutrition (NASPGHAN) and the European Society for Pediatric Gastroenterology, Hepatology and Nutrition (ESPGHAN) (October 2009)
This document provides evidence-based guidelines for the diagnosis and management of gastoesophageal reflux and gastroesophageal reflux disease in children. These guidelines were developed based on the Delphi principle.
Guidelines


Management of Attention Deficit and Hyperkinetic Disorders in Children and Young People. Sign Guideline 112 (October 2009)
Children with ADHD/HKD and their families require a comprehensive package of care, involving education services as well as health.

The guideline aims to provide a framework for evidence based assessment and management of ADHD/HKD which can be applied within a local multidisciplinary and multiagency approach.
Guideline

COMMISSIONING

Joint Guidance on Development of Local Protocols between Drug and Alcohol Treatment Services and Local Safeguarding and Family Services (3rd November 2009)
This guidance is intended to help commissioners and providers meet existing commitments by providing the latest information and highlighting good practice.
Guidance


Evaluation: Top Tips for Commissioners and Practitioners (October 2009)
This paper, from Greater Manchester Public Health Practice Unit, aims to give commissioners and service providers a framework to enable a more efficient method of carrying out evaluation. It explains the purpose of evaluation, types of evaluation with examples, and discusses service user involvement and engagement
Document

Outline Service Specification: Personalised Care Planning for People with Long Term Conditions (3rd November 2009)
This Outline Service Specification (OSS) has been developed to assist NHS commissioners to put in place appropriate arrangements to ensure people with long-term conditions have informed choice of, and access to, services that best enable them to manage their condition.
Document

Meeting the health needs of children and young people a guide for commissioners (3rd November 2009)
Healthcare for London has published new NHS guidance on improving healthcare for children and young people in London.

The guide recommends:
  • establishing paediatric assessment units in all hospitals that have an A&E department to ensure children get the right care as quickly as possible
  • healthcare be delivered in the home where appropriate or as close to home as possible reducing unnecessary visits to hospital
  • creating multidisciplinary teams of health professionals to deliver care more locally and making best use of specialist skills in the right setting.
Guide

CONSULTATIONS

NHS Constitution: a consultation on new patient rights (10th November 2009)
The NHS Constitution brought together in one place what the NHS does, what it stands for and the commitments it should live up to. It describes and renews our commitment to the values and enduring principles of the NHS. It is also a living document that needs to reflect what matters and is relevant to the needs of patients, the public and staff in the 21st century.

This consultation proposes new patient rights to:
  • treatment within a maximum of 18 weeks from a GP referral and to be seen by a cancer specialist within 2 weeks from a GP referral, or where this is not possible, for the NHS to take reasonable steps to offer a range of alternative providers; and
  • NHS Health Checks for those aged 40 to 74 to assess their risk of heart disease, stroke, diabetes and kidney disease
Closing date for comments is 5th February 2010.
Consultation

Regulatory fees - have your say. Fees for National Health Service providers that are registered under the Health and Social Care Act 2008 from April 2010 (2nd November 2009)
From April 2010, NHS providers must pay fees for their registration with Care Quality Commission (CQC) under the Health and Social Care Act 2008. This consultation document sets out the (CQC) proposals for an interim scheme of fees for NHS providers, while the registration system is being phased in during 2010-2011.

Closing date for comments is 26th January 2010.

Consultation

CONSULTATION RESPONSES

Personal, social, health and economic education: Curriculum reform consultation report (November 2009)
This report is the outcome of the consultation that was held on between 30 April and 24 July 2009. The consultation examined concerns raised by making personal, social, health and economic education statutory. The concerns include pressures on the curriculum, the role of governing bodies and the parental right of withdrawal from sex and relationships education.
Report

The Office of the Health Professions Adjudicator Regulations 2009: consultation response (2nd November 2009)
Response to the consultation on the Health and Social Care Act 2008 (Commencement no 11) Order 2009 and the Office of the Health Professions Adjudicator Regulations 2009.
Consultation Response

Response to the consultation on draft regulations for the framework for the registration of health and adult social care providers (29th October 2009)
This document provides the response to the consultation on draft Regulations launched in the Response to consultation on the framework for the registration of health and adult social care providers and consultation on draft Regulations.

The draft Regulations set out who will need to register with the Care Quality Commission (scope of registration) and what they will need to do to register and remain registered (registration requirements).
Consultation Response

DENTAL

Oral Health Inequalities (30th October 2009)
The British Dental Associations (BDA’s) Oral Health Inequalities policy sets out measures designed to tackle the unacceptable and growing inequalities in the nation’s oral health. Those living in the most deprived areas of the UK suffer the highest levels of oral disease.

The paper emphasises oral health education and preventive approaches to disease. It identifies the dental team as ideally placed to inform and advise patients about matters affecting their oral and general health, including nutrition, tobacco and alcohol. Strategies are set out to address the special requirements of vulnerable sections of society, including children, older people, prisoners and those with disabilities.
Policy

DIABETES

Care recommendation: aspiring treatment in diabetes (22nd October 2009)
The use of antiplatelet agents such as aspirin has been shown to reduce the chance of future cardiovascular events in people who have both diabetes and established cardiovascular disease (includes heart disease, stroke/TIA and peripheral vascular disease). This guidance recommends that people with diabetes who have established cardiovascular disease should be offered aspirin treatment, in addition to following a healthy lifestyle.
Guidance

DIRECTIONS

The Primary Medical Services (Directed Enhanced Services - Pandemic Influenza (H1N1 Vaccination Scheme) and Statement of Financial Entitlements (Amendment) (No. 6) Directions 2009 (29th October 2009)
These Directions come into force from 30 October and require PCTs to offer to enter into a Directed Enhanced Service with their existing primary medical care contractors who hold a list of registered patients, by 13 November, to deliver the H1N1 vaccine to patients in the priority groups identified in the CMO letter of 13 August 2009. The attached brief note provides further contextual details. Guidance will be available on the NHS Employers website.
Directions

DISABILITIES

Wave 1 Action and Learning Sites 2008-09 Final report (3rd November 2009)
This report sets out the work and progress made by the 12 user-led organisation (ULO) action and learning sites (ALS) funded as Wave 1 for the period April 2008 - March 2009.
Report

Our family, our future (3rd November 2009)
This new report, from Contact a Family, finds that families with disabled children have the same hopes and dreams as other families but often face bureaucracy and prejudice trying to achieve them. The report features the stories of 30 UK families whose children are affected by a range of disabilities and rare conditions.
Report

DOCTORS

Good Medical Practice - pandemic influenza (2nd November 2009)
The General Medical Council (GMC) has updated its guidance for doctors working in a pandemic.

Adjustments include:
  • an allowance for doctors to work outside their normal field of practice so long as they are able to do so safely, for example an orthopaedic surgeon may be asked to support A&E admissions or administer vaccines.
  • no formal duty to report concerns about resources, equipment or insufficient patient services, other than in exceptional circumstances - because managers will already be aware of the pressures involved working in a pandemic.
  • additional guidance on making decisions about which patients receive treatment where resources are scarce. Patient care prioritisation will be based on clinical need and on the patients likely capacity to benefit. For example, young people should not be given automatic priority over adults.
  • doctors running research programmes are asked to consider whether to interrupt them during a pandemic.
Guidance

DRUGS

Injection Drug Use and Related Risk Behaviors (29th October 2009)
Combined 2006 to 2008 data, from the National Survey on Drug Use and Health, indicate that an annual average of 425,000 persons aged 12 or older (0.17 percent) used a needle to inject heroin, cocaine, methamphetamine, or other stimulants during the past year. 13.0 percent of past year injection drug users had used a needle that they knew or suspected someone else had used before them the last time they used a needle to inject drugs, and less than one third (29.0 percent) of them cleaned the needle with bleach prior to their last injection. More than one half (52.8 percent) of past year injection drug users purchased the last needle they used from a pharmacy, and 12.4 percent obtained the needle through a needle exchange program.
Report

Estimating drug harms: a risky business? (October 2009)
Taking a drug is not currently illegal in the UK, and while there have been attempts to make it so, the most reasoned arguments suggest this is not a particularly useful way of reducing harm.

In this edited transcript of the 2009 Eve Saville lecture Professor Nutt discusses drug regulation and control, drugs politics and suggests a way forward on the drugs debate.
Publication

2009 Annual report: the state of the drugs problem in Europe (November 2009)
The report on the state of the drugs problem in Europe presents the European Monitoring Centre for Drugs and Drug Addictions (EMCDDA's) yearly overview of the drug phenomenon. This is an essential reference book for policymakers, specialists and practitioners in the drugs field or indeed anyone seeking the latest findings on drugs in Europe. Published every autumn, the report contains non-confidential data supported by an extensive range of figures.
Report

EDUCATION/SCHOOLS

Customer Voice Research - Sex and Relationships Education (November 2009)
This research was commissioned to investigate parents’ views on sex and relationships education (SRE); including whether parents should have the option to withdraw their children from SRE and, if so, at what age parents feel it would be appropriate to remove the option for parents to withdraw children and young people from SRE.
Report

ESTATES/FACILITIES

Space for Health - new website (27th October 2009)
This new website is intended to help healthcare premises professionals plan, design and manage healthcare premises. Although the full site won't be launched until April 2010, this site previews the work in progress.
Website

FINANCE

Means to an end. Joint financing across health and social care (29th October 2009)
This report reviews the joint financing and integrated care arrangements between NHS bodies and councils with adult social care responsibilities. It builds on our previous publication, Clarifying joint financing arrangements, that explained the practical implications and legislative framework for joint financing.

It considers how these arrangements are used, focusing on learning disability, mental health and older people - areas where service users most often need health and social care.

The report's recommendations and examples of notable practice aim to help national and local bodies better understand the options available, how to use them and to achieve better outcomes for service users.
Report

FOUNDATION TRUSTS

Call for evidence - review of restrictions on private patient income: the NHS foundation trust private patient income cap (5th November 2009)
The Department of Health has launched a call for written evidence to inform a review of the 'private patient income cap' for NHS Foundation Trusts. The call for evidence invites submissions until Thursday 31 December 2009.
Document