Chris Packham: The trouble with public health

People think public health is all (lecturing the masses on) sex, drugs, and alcohol. Even fellow clinicians tend to forget about defined roles such as the public health specialist. These individuals focus on using public health approaches to ensure cost-effective and appropriate planning, commissioning, and provision of NHS services. They can and do help the NHS and […]

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Florence Wilcock: Improving maternity care is everybody’s business

Personalised care. Continuity of care. Safer care. Better postnatal and perinatal mental healthcare. Multiprofessional working. Working across boundaries. A fair payment system. This vision of care could apply to pretty much any healthcare service: it is essentially individualised care with seamless coordination across whatever professional or geographic boundaries may exist. In fact, these are the […]

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Ahmed Rashid: The UK junior doctor contract dispute in 10 hashtags

Hashtag: #iminworkjeremy Description: When Jeremy Hunt (Secretary of State for health) accused the NHS of having a “Monday to Friday culture,” healthcare workers from across the country posted selfies of themselves busy at work on their weekend shifts. Example: @trentconsultant #ImInWorkJeremy been round with registrar. Every patient seen. All poorly ones or who need decision […]

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Matthew Honeyman: Saving paper, saving money, or transforming care?

Yesterday we published a briefing on the digital agenda that has been pursued by the NHS since 2013 – the year Secretary of State for health Jeremy Hunt challenged the NHS to “go paperless.” We chart progress made to date and look at some of the barriers and opportunities presented. This comes two weeks after the Wachter […]

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David Shaw: Delaying surgery for obese and smoking patients is illogical and unethical

It was recently reported that Vale of York clinical commissioning group (CCG) plans to delay all elective surgery for obese patients for a year until they lose 10% of their weight, and to smokers for six months unless they stop smoking for eight weeks. [1] Both the overall rationale for this policy and the clinical […]

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Ian R Barker: Compassion fatigue—the neglected problem

Compassion fatigue—also known as vicarious traumatisation results in a gradual reduction in compassion over time. It is more common in those dealing with trauma or caring for close relatives (1). If often presents as hopelessness, decrease in experience of pleasure, constant stress and anxiety, and a pervasive negative attitude (2). Interestingly, it has been claimed […]

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Nick Hopkinson: Saving the NHS—a lesson from Carthage

Cato the Elder is said to have concluded every speech he made in the Roman Senate, regardless of the topic, with “Delenda est Carthago”—Carthage must be destroyed. In answering the Editor of The BMJ’s call for ideas on how the medical profession can protest against the destruction of the NHS, a similar clarity and consistency […]

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Health apps and how to evaluate them: Review of the PHE 2016 conference, part two

Embedded in the NHS Five Year Forward View is a sleek, bullet pointed ministerial promise: “an expanding set of NHS accredited health apps that patients will be able to use to organise and manage their own health and care.” Whatever your views might be on ministerial promises, it’s definitely true that digital technology is making […]

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Using behavioural science and digital technology to “nudge”: Review of the PHE 2016 conference, part one

Being a GP at a public health conference is, I imagine, like being a proctologist at a plumbers’ convention: familiar subject matter, different perspective. I spend a lot of my clinical time advising people about smoking, alcohol, healthy eating, weight loss, mental health, contraception—all sorts of things that have at their core the vagaries of […]

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