Wednesday, January 31, 2007

Another 15 Minutes...Health News from Fade








Another 15 Minutes is currently experiencing navigation issues as a result of software changes, as soon as we identify a solution the navigation menu will return, we apologise for any inconvenience this causes.






National News




Hospitals losing the battle to stem spread of killer infection - Independent 31/01/07
Infections with the lethal hospital bug Clostridium difficile rose to a record last year, defying efforts to curb the growing threat. Figures released yesterday by the Health Protection Agency (HPA) showed that there were 42,625 cases between January and September, up from 40,390 in the same period in 2005, a rise of 5.5 per cent. Cases of the infection have doubled since the late 1990s, and have increased more than tenfold in the past 15 years.




Primary care trust backs down on decision not to fund eye medication - Independent 31/01/07
Public and political pressure yesterday forced an NHS trust to review its decision not to fund the purchase of a sight-saving drug for a former Labour MP.




Doctors replace heart valve using keyhole surgery - Independent 31/01/07
An operation to replace a heart valve using keyhole surgery has been carried out in Leicester. Gladys Adams, 89, underwent the procedure, yesterday at Glenfield hospital, a specialist cardiac centre. The technique avoids the need for open heart surgery and halves recovery times for patients.




Food retailers act to reduce heart disease - Independent 31/01/07
The country's biggest retailers announced today that they will stop adding harmful fats to their own-brand products in a move that could cut heart disease.




Retailers to stop trans-fat use - BBC Health News 31/01/07
Major UK retailers plan to stop adding harmful trans-fats to their own-brand products by the end of the year.




BMA team 'stunned by GP contract' - BBC Health News 31/01/07
GPs were so stunned by the terms offered to them when negotiating their new contract that they thought it was a "bit of a laugh", a doctor has said.




Dentists 'turning away patients' BBC Health News 31/01/07
Dentists are turning away patients because local health chiefs are running out of funds, dental leaders say.




Cumbria and Lancashire News




Daughters Agony Over Mrsa Mothers Death - Lancashire Telegraph 31/01/07
A DAUGHTER has spoken of her frustration after MRSA contributed to the death of her mother in hospital. An inquest heard that Ellen Brindle, 86, was believed to have caught the superbug during treatment for a bladder infection at Royal Blackburn Hospital.





1m Nhs Gift To India And Pakistan - Lancashire Telegraph 31/01/07
HOSPITAL equipment worth up to a million pounds which served generations of East Lancashire people has been sent thousands of miles to help the poor of Pakistan and India.






Greater Manchester News





Whelley hospital to close - Wigan News 31/01/07
WHELLEY hospital is to close in a massive shake-up of health services across Wigan. Around 155 staff, who work at the site were informed by emergency meetings on Friday morning that the hospital site would be closing to patients and that its 73 beds would be removed - but that "health services" would remain on the site.





Gastric band pioneer feels the pinch - Manchester Evening News 31/01/07
TEN weeks after being fitted with a pioneering stomach band, Maria Corvi watched doctors use a remote control device to tighten it - in a bid to limit what she eats.



Tuesday, January 30, 2007

Another 15 Minutes...Health News from Fade



Another 15 Minutes is currently experiencing navigation issues as a result of software changes, as soon as we identify a solution the navigation menu will return, we apologise for any inconvenience this causes.


Listen to this edition of Another 15 Minutes...Health News from Fade Listen to this edition of Another 15 Minutes...Health News from Fade


National News

New Story


Sunbed users face nearly triple the risk of skin cancer compared with a decade ago as a result of higher-powered equipment, medical experts will warn today. A survey of tanning studios, health spas and sports complexes found that 83% of sunbeds exceeded limits for ultraviolet radiation exposure laid down in European safety guidelines. The survey revealed a 30% rise in the number of unregulated, privately operated sunbeds and an increase in the use of lamps which emit up to twice as much UV(B) radiation as a typical sunbed 10 years ago.


Additional Story


Cancer risk from sunbeds doubles - The Times 30th January 2007


Additional Story


Sunbed skin cancer danger has trebled - Daily Mail 29th January 2007


New Story


The government will be urged today to rethink its controversial NHS building programme with the publication of a report which makes sweeping criticisms of the disastrous attempt to build a super-hospital in London. A watchdog group of MPs says the collapse of the £900m scheme in Paddington Basin was the result of incompetence, appalling planning, local staff who floundered and were out of their depth, and a lack of clarity from the Department of Health.


Additional Story


£13bn hospital plans 'at risk from incompetent managers' - The Times 30th January 2007


Additional Story


Ministers warned over NHS schemes - BBC Health News 30th January 2007


New Story


A Gulf war veteran who slid into despair and self-loathing after leaving the army admitted yesterday that he had cold-bloodedly shot dead four members of his family after finally "flipping". David Bradley, who lived like a hermit with a stash of military magazines and an illegal arsenal of weapons, planned the killings on the lines of a military ambush in a homely end-terrace in Newcastle upon Tyne.


Additional Story


I've just killed four of my family, war veteran told police - The Times 30th January 2007


Additional Story


Ex-soldier massacred family after 'flipping' - The Telegraph 30th January 2007


New Story


Liposuction is booming - and the vast majority of patients are women. What makes them submit to such a violent procedure - especially when it removes only a few pounds of fat?


Additional Story


Forget the 'moob job' just be yourself - The Telegraph 30th January 2007


Additional Story


More men go for surgery to get rid of 'moobs' - Daily Mail 29th January 2007


New Story


Giving birth naturally increases the risk of minor brain haemorrhages in newborn babies, according to a study. Brain scans of babies aged between one and five weeks showed small ruptures in blood vessels in or around the brain are common, affecting one in four children born naturally.


New Story


Oriental mushrooms have been valued by herbalists for centuries but new research thrusts the humble common A. bisporus into the limelight due to their potentially powerful health-giving properties. A. bisporus includes white mushrooms (button, closed cup, open cup, large flat) and brown mushrooms (chestnut, champignon marron, crimini or portobello).


New Story


Ever worried that blood might be clotting near your brain without you knowing? Or whether you have inherited your father's weak heart? On turning 50, David Bodanis decides to get himself checked out


New Story


A new survey has found that vanity motivates us to exercise more than the promise of good health. But how do you ensure you are not beefing up where you'd rather be lithe? Peta Bee reports


New Story


Last week's message to the National Criminal Justice Board did, as John Reid's column suggests, merely remind judges that prison should be reserved for serious, persistent and violent offenders (This won't be the last of it, January 29). This would be especially welcome if it signalled a renewed determination to develop and promote community sentences. His analysis of the factors driving the explosion in prison numbers is at best partial. It ignores the government's ratcheting up of the use of custody by relentless tough talk. It also fails to recognise the use of our jails as a social dustbin, catching thousands with mental-health, drug and alcohol problems who fall through the welfare net.


New Story


More than 12,000 academics including two Nobel laureates have signed a petition urging the European commission to make publicly funded academic research available for free on the internet. The online petition, a direct challenge to the lucrative businesses of many scientific publishers, comes ahead of an EC conference next month where "open access" to research will be debated. The conference will be attended by the Brussels information commissioner, Viviane Reding, and commissioner for science and research, Janez Potocnik.


New Story


After going through a divorce, Maggie Logan was worried about her eight-year-old daughter, Kayleigh. Once an outgoing child, she had become withdrawn. At school, teachers said her behaviour was erratic; sometimes there were outbursts of anger and crying. It wasn't until she saw a counsellor in school from a charity called The Place2Be that things improved.


New Story


I took my health for granted until I became ill with rheumatoid arthritis about six years ago. I looked into how I could help myself and came upon nutritional therapy. It helped with my arthritis and I decided to study it. I'm in the third and final year of my course. The first year was a medicine-based foundation course about how the body works, so we learned about the bones, the systems of the body, pathologies and what sort of treatment would be given by orthodox practitioners. The second year was the first year of nutrition - we learned about vitamins, the effect different types of food have on different areas of the body, and how nutrients interact. The main thing we learned was that what is good for one person is not necessarily good for another. We have to do 200 clinical hours where we work with patients under the supervision of qualified practitioners. You learn the most during that time because it's real life.


New Story


With sex education failing to teach young people about relationships, pornography - on mobiles, online and in magazines - is increasingly filling the gap. By Rachel Bell


New Story


The Government's drive to create a patient-centred NHS is failing, a report warns. Patients are less involved in healthcare than they were three years ago, and decisions about medicines and treatment are increasingly being taken out of their hands by GPs. The results will come as a blow to ministers, who have championed choice in the NHS based on increasing patient involvement.


New Story


A legal campaign has been launched to eradicate regional inequalities in the NHS that deny treatment to thousands who are facing blindness. The challenge is being spearheaded by a former Labour MP, Alice Mahon, who has pledged to force health bosses to provide the drugs to save her own sight - and that of other sufferers.


Additional Story


Former MP fights for drug to save her eyesight - The Telegraph 30th January 2007


Additional Story


Ex-MP in drug fight to save her sight - Daily Mail 29th January 2007


Additional Story


Ex-MP battles NHS over eye drug - BBC Health News 30th January 2007


New Story


Working parents are being charged up to £19,000 a year to send their children to nursery — more than the fees for some of Britain’s most prestigious public schools. New figures reveal that the cost of daycare for babies and young children has increased by almost 30 per cent in six years, more than twice the rate of inflation.


Additional Story


A childminder is best for us and the children - The Telegraph 30th January 2007


Additional Story


Soaring fees leave families priced out of childcare - Daily Mail 29th January 2007


New Story


Family doctors could be offered incentives to work more unsociable hours, Andrew Burnham, the Health Minister, said yesterday. He wants doctors to tailor their hours to suit patients just three years after the Government rewrote GPs’ contracts allowing them to stop out-of-hours work.


Additional Story


Another dose of cash for GPs - Daily Mail 29th January 2007


New Story


A single compensation claim cost the health service more than £12 million, figures have revealed. The claim was for a failure to diagnose preeclampsia, the potentially fatal condition that causes high blood pressure in pregnant women. The claim, settled for £12.4 million, was the single largest payout by the Department of Health under its clinical negligence scheme.


New Story


We accept that GPs have all done better financially under the new contract; that was what was intended to restore morale and halt the decline in GP numbers, but we and our staff have also worked harder delivering the Government’s quality targets and improving public health. Because of our hard work we did better than the Government expected but we now have to pay an additional 14 per cent into our pensions which was previously paid as employers’ contribution by the NHS. We have also had to fund pay increases for our staff and increased surgery bills


Additional Story


BMA chief rallies members against GP bashers - The Telegraph 30th January 2007


New Story


The body of a baby boy has been lying in a mortuary for 20 years because his parents refuse to accept that he died of cot death, it was disclosed yesterday. Four-month-old Christopher Blum will remain in a drawer marked "Baby Blum: Deceased", his tiny frame kept at -8C, until his mother and father sign his death certificate which would allow a funeral to take place.


New Story


The number of operations cancelled due to a lack of sterile surgical instruments has risen 40 per cent in four years. Some 1,765 operations were cancelled in 2005/06 — up from 1,252 in 2002/03.


Additional Story


Operations cut for lack of sterile equipment - Daily Mail 29th January 2007


Additional Story




New Story


The NHS should consider billing patients for ineffective treatments and drop all prescription charges, senior public health doctors said yesterday. Spiralling health costs had to be controlled, said Dr Tim Crayford, the president of the Association of Directors of Public Health, and one way would be to charge patients for treatments for which there was not good evidence that they worked or when cheaper options were available.


Additional Story


A grandfather died two days after doctors admitted they had spent six months treating him for the wrong disease, it emerged yesterday. Tony Bannister, 73, endured gruelling radiotherapy treatment for bone cancer before experts told him he was actually suffering from tuberculosis.


New Story


Should we microwave our kitchen cloths to kill germs? Such is our concern over superbugs and killer viruses that many of us probably considered the idea put forward last week by U.S. scientists. But according to PROFESSOR CHARLES PENN, a microbiologist at the University of Birmingham, it's a waste of time and we should stop being so obsessive about cleanliness.


New Story


Those who are taking statins to lower their cholesterol may well be confused about whether it is worth it and how safe they are. Last week an article in the medical journal The Lancet claimed the drugs don't benefit women or elderly men if they don't have a cardiovascular problem, while for younger men, taking statins only slightly reduces the risk of heart attack if they'd never had an attack.


New Story


Michael Aspel has a good line in self-deprecating humour, so it comes as no surprise to hear him crack a joke about his cancer. Four years ago, he was diagnosed with non-Hodgkin's lymphoma (NHL), a slow-growing or indolent cancer of the lymphatic system.


New Story


When Shirley Newrock was in her early 40s, her family suffered the sort of human tragedy common to many families throughout the country. At the age of just 55, her husband Michael, whose behaviour had become increasingly erratic, was diagnosed with Alzheimer's.


New Story


As a child Vicky Trehorel suffered chronic digestive problems which doctors refused to take seriously. Then, at the age of nine, she was finally diagnosed with Crohn's disease, a debilitating gut condition which affects as many as 120,000 people in the UK.


New Story


A pioneering sound wave technique has helped one woman to get rid of her fibroids and also prevented her from losing her womb. Paula Green, 32, started having excruciating period pains ten years ago My problems started ten years ago, when every month I started having excruciating period pains, and the flow became really heavy.


New Story


Children are being prescribed a special type of water softener to reduce symptoms of eczema, the skin condition that affects up to one in five school-age youngsters. The move follows research which has shown that eczema is up to 50per cent more common among primary school pupils who live in hard water areas.


New Story


Overweight children are being placed in foster care on the grounds that they are victims of child abuse. Experts have warned that feeding youngsters an endless diet of junk food causes serious health problems – and should be treated in the same way as physical or sexual assault.


New Story


A drugs firm covered up vital evidence about the safety of an anti-depressant linked to a string of suicides, it was claimed last night. Seroxat was taken by an estimated 50,000 British youngsters before being banned for patients under 18 in 2003.


Additional Story


Drug company 'hid' suicide link - BBC Health News 29th January 2007


New Story


A massive shortage of midwives is forcing many maternity units to turn away expectant mothers. The shortages are putting at risk the health of women and their babies, who are forced to travel many miles from home for hospital births.


New Story


Thousands of severely disabled young people are being let down by local authorities who fail to plan care for them as adults, a report has said. The Commission for Social Care Inspection is calling for urgent action to ensure disabled children continue to get the help they need into adulthood.


New Story


Afghan opium poppies should be used to make pharmaceutical products such as morphine rather than be destroyed, the Conservatives have said. Lord Howell told the House of Lords licensing farmers could stop their poppies being used to make heroin.


New Story


A psychiatrist charged with the manslaughter of a suicidal patient has admitted to failures in his treatment. Peter Fisher, 46, is accused of killing Peter Weighman, who died from a drugs overdose at West Cumberland Infirmary in Whitehaven in September 2002.


New Story


Patients are getting faster access to family doctors, a survey shows. Nearly nine in 10 patients are seen within the target of 48 hours, with four in 10 seen on the same day - up from 27% three years ago.


International News

A vivid new way to highlight the global distribution of wealth, health and income is unveiled today in maps that have been distorted to highlight inequalities. "You can say it, you can prove it, you can tabulate it, but it is only when you show it that it hits home," said Prof Danny Dorling, of the University of Sheffield, one of the developers of Worldmapper, a collection of maps — cartograms — that rescale the size of territories in proportion to the value being represented.


New Story



A robot that is swallowed and travels through the body looking for cancer is being developed by scientists. The pill-sized gadget will be able to test for tumours inside the body and transmit findings back to a computer.


New Story


Do you crave sweets, binge on starchy foods then curse yourself when you pile on the pounds? If the answer is yes, it's time to stop punishing yourself. According to an eminent American scientist, your weight gain may not be your fault.


New Story



US researchers say they have created a "virtual" model of all the biochemical reactions that occur in human cells. They hope the computer model will allow scientists to tinker with metabolic processes to find new treatments for conditions such as high cholesterol.


New Story


The world's oldest person, Emma Faust Tillman, has died in the US aged 114. Mrs Tillman, the daughter of former slaves, died "peacefully" on Sunday night, said an official at a nursing home in Hartford, Connecticut.


New Story


The European Union has confirmed that the deadly H5N1 strain of bird flu has been found on a farm in Hungary. A spokesman said tests at the EU's approved laboratory in Weybridge, south of London, had confirmed the results announced by Hungary last week.


New Story



Official campaigning is beginning in Portugal ahead of a referendum on easing its strict abortion law. At least 9,000 anti-abortion protesters marched through Lisbon on Sunday urging people to reject the proposal.


New Story


Japan has third bird flu outbreak - BBC Health News 29th January 2007


Officials in Japan have confirmed a third outbreak of bird flu - although they are still determining if it is the H5N1 strain dangerous to humans. About 40 chickens have died on a farm in Takahashi, in Okayama prefecture.

Cumbria and Lancashire News

New Story

FAMILIES with disabled children say closing respite centres in north and west Cumbria will leave them with nowhere to turn. After years of uncertainty, health bosses have drawn up firm plans to shut both Orton Lea in Carlisle and Seacroft at St Bees.


New Story


Drug death doctor admits failings - BBC Health News 29th January 2007


A psychiatrist charged with the manslaughter of a suicidal patient has admitted to failures in his treatment. Peter Fisher, 46, is accused of killing Peter Weighman, who died from a drugs overdose at West Cumberland Infirmary in Whitehaven in September 2002.


Greater Manchester News

New Story

A NURSE left a frail, elderly patient lying on the floor with blood on his face for more than four hours, a misconduct hearing heard. Phumuzile Mthethwa was supposed to help the man, who suffered from dementia, back into his bed, the Nursing and Midwifery Council was told.


New Story


HOSPITAL bosses are being forced to borrow millions of pounds after the sale of a former hospital collapsed. Finance chiefs at the Royal Bolton Hospital had been hoping to sell Fall Birch Hospital in Horwich by the end of the financial year in April.


New Story


CHILDREN need to be taught to cook healthy food in school if Britain is to beat the problem of obesity, says a Bolton health boss. Margaret Clare, executive member for adult social care and health at Bolton Council, wants to see old-fashioned domestic science taught


New Story


Ken battles back to live life to full - The Bolton News 29th January 2007


KEN Eaton thought he would never be able to live a normal life again after an infection forced doctors to amputate his leg. But now, the 58-year-old has completed a counselling course and is showing other amputees that there is life after losing a limb.


Podcast


Listen to this edition of Another 15 Minutes...Health News from Fade Listen to this edition of Another 15 Minutes...Health News from Fade

Monday, January 29, 2007

Another 15 Minutes...Health News from Fade



Another 15 Minutes is currently experiencing navigation issues as a result of software changes, as soon as we identify a solution the navigation menu will return, we apologise for any inconvenience this causes.


Listen to this edition of Another 15 Minutes...Health News from Fade Listen toMonday's edition of Another 15 Minutes...Health News from Fade
Listen to this edition of Another 15 Minutes...Health News from Fade Listen to Sunday's edition of Another 15 Minutes...Health News from Fade
Listen to this edition of Another 15 Minutes...Health News from Fade Listen to Saturday's edition of Another 15 Minutes...Health News from Fade

New Section


National News

New Story


The number of people turning to liposuction in an attempt to lose weight has risen by 90% in one year - prompting experts to warn it is not a solution for obesity. The operation, in which fat cells are sucked from under the skin, has jumped from the eighth most popular cosmetic procedure in 2005 to third in 2006, behind breast and eyelid surgery.


Additional Story


Women turn from exercise and dieting to liposuction - The Independent 29th January 2007


Additional Story


Liposuction operation double in a year - The Times 29th January 2007


Additional Story


Make-over shows are to blame for the growing liposuction craze, say surgeons - The Telegraph 29th January 2007


Additional Story


Liposuction soars in popularity - BBC Health News 28th January 2007


New Story


Our children have never been fatter. Nor have they ever been so prone to eating disorders like anorexia. What can parents do? How do you steer your kids away from one danger without pushing them towards the other? Lucy Atkins has some practical advice


New Story


Christopher Blum was four months old when he died. His father found him in his bedroom, rigid and cold in his Babygro, his hands bunched up beside his face, a tear of blood dried around his nose. The pathologist told the parents that their son had died of cot death. They didn't believe it, and they still don't. Hours before his death, Christopher had been given a triple vaccination.


New Story


The trade union which represents senior civil servants - including Whitehall policy advisers, government lawyers, tax inspectors and NHS bosses - has been dumped by its financial advisers because its members aren't rich enough. Towry Law has provided financial advice to the FDA, formerly known as First Division Association, for five years, but it has suddenly terminated the contract. Towry Law said it wants to focus on individuals with £100,000 or more to invest - and it cannot find enough among the FDA's senior civil servants.


New Story


Foods containing unnecessary and unhealthy amounts of salt are named and shamed today as Britain's shoppers are urged to boycott potentially dangerous processed foods. The worst offenders include staple items such as bread, crumpets and cereals as well as the popular meat snack Peperami Sticks, which have about 4g of salt per 100g.


Additional Story


Watchdog calls for boycott on salty foods - The Telegraph 29th January 2007


New Story


Oliver James (Comment, January 24) offers a seductive explanation for rising mental-health problems, but fails to synthesise a convincing argument. To scapegoat the New Labour establishment is simplistic. It is true that the severely mentally ill are now as marginalised as they have ever been and that this government has failed shamefully in this realm. It is also true that antidepressant prescribing is excessive. But if James thinks a love of Prozac is an Anglo-American phenomenon he should go to France.


Doctors will create British medical history this week when they give a patient a new heart valve through no more than a small hole in the groin, rather than traditional open-heart surgery. Cardiologists at the Glenfield Hospital, Leicester, will operate for just 10 minutes, and the patients will leave hospital after two days rather than several weeks. The procedure will also cost the NHS a lot less

Additional Story

Additional Story

Pioneering valve surgery planned - BBC Health News 26th January 2007


New Story


How can the government give processed foods the green light, but condemn the ingredients for a rustic Italian dish?


New Story


What could be more natural than a 'walk in the park'? Today, few urban areas lack access to green spaces, while ministers have made local parks central to their public health agenda. Only last week, schoolchildren were given pedometers to take to the park in the battle against early obesity.


Drug users on methadone for heroin addiction should be given shopping vouchers and other rewards as incentives to stay clean, according to draft guidance published for consultation. Voucher schemes have worked well in the US, according to the guidance from the National Institute for Clinical Excellence. Users should be given a prompt reward for a urine or blood sample that proves they are free of heroin or other illicit drugs, rising in value the longer they stay that way.

Additional Story


Additional Story

Shopping voucher plan for addicts - BBC Health News 26th January 2007


New Story

Researchers have linked stress experienced by pregnant women to higher incidences of mental and behavioural problems in their children. The research, presented yesterday at a Royal College of Psychiatrists conference in London, suggests high levels of the stress hormone cortisol in amniotic fluid in the womb could affect the development of the brains of foetuses, affecting their future social skills, language ability and memory.

Additional Story

Stress 'harms brain in the womb' - BBC Health News 26th January 2007


New Story


The call came at 4am. The voice was hoarse and feral. It was the way Luke often sounded when spiralling out of control. His father gripped the phone blearily. "Dad, I've got bad news. I'm in the locked ward and ... you remember Stevie, that nice charge nurse? I ripped out his eye.

A couple who supplied thousands of bars of chocolate laced with cannabis to ease the pain of multiple sclerosis sufferers escaped jail yesterday. Lezley and Mark Gibson, both 42, got nine-month jail sentences, suspended for two years, after being found guilty at Carlisle crown court of conspiring to supply the class C drug. Marcus Davies, 36, who ran a PO box and website for their organisation, received the same sentence.


Jowell to wage war on the 'cult of size zero' - The Independent on Sunday 28th January 2007

Tessa Jowell is to join forces with leaders in the fashion world to wage war on the "tyranny of thinness", which she says is harming millions of young women. The Secretary of State for Culture, in partnership with Stuart Rose, chief executive of Marks & Spencer and chairman of the British Fashion Council, will set up a task force to deal with what she calls the "cult of size zero". Experts in eating disorders will also be on the panel, along with fashion industry representatives. They will talk to girls in schools about what needs to change, using the internet, and there may also be a poster campaign.

Additional Story

Jowell to tackle 'cult of size zero' - The Sunday Telegraph 28th January 2007

Additional Story

Topshop boss to ban skinny models - The Telegaph 27th January 2007


New Story

A leading Islamic doctor is urging British Muslims not to vaccinate their children against diseases such as measles, mumps, and rubella because they contain substances making them unlawful for Muslims to take. Dr Abdul Majid Katme, head of the Islamic Medical Association, says almost all vaccines contain un-Islamic "haram" derivatives of animal or human tissue, and that Muslim parents are better off letting childrens' immune systems develop on their own.

Additional Story

Muslim urged to shun 'unholy' vaccines - The Sunday Times 28th January 2007


New Story


The National Health Service is a bit like the Labour government - nobody's got a good word to say about it. In the past week we've heard about the scandal of GPs' pay and the Tories unveiled their Big Idea, which seemed to mean that health trusts could set their own budgets and abolish targets set by central government. Then on Friday we heard about the wheelchair-bound patient who went to the bathroom and returned to find her bed had been stripped ready for the next patient - the hospital in Devon was so short of beds it seemed they couldn't wait till patients had actually got dressed before they were evicted.


New Story


The costs of educating children with special needs privately risk spiralling out of control, with little indication of whether the money spent represents good value, research from the Audit Commission suggests. Each year councils in England and Wales pay for about 11,000 children with special educational needs (SEN) to be educated in private or charit- able residential schools because there is no suitable local state provision. But fees have risen by 79 per cent in six years, a survey of the local authorities has found.


New Story



A shortage of midwives is putting mothers and babies at risk, in spite of a Labour manifesto pledge to increase the numbers so that every pregnant woman would be cared for throughout by the same nominated midwife. Research shows that many baby units are failing to meet targets for the number of midwives and that Labour’s promise is far from being achieved.


New Story


The health of thousands of newborn children will be in jeopardy by the end of the decade because more than a fifth of pregnant women will be obese, according to researchers. Obesity during pregnancy poses one of the biggest risks to an unborn child and is one of the most decisive factors in the development of heart, kidney and urinary tract defects. But an extensive study published today in BJOG: An International Journal of Obstetrics and Gynaecology, suggests that the number of women who are obese when they become pregnant has risen from 9.9 per cent in 1990 to 16 per cent in 2004. Researchers say that if the trend continues, 22 per cent will be obese by 2010.


Additional Story


Expectant mums 'getting too fat' - BBC Health News 28th January 2007


New Story


The sentiments regarding healthcare expressed by your correspondent David Chandler (letter, Jan 24) remind me of the bitter objections raised in the mid and late 1940s against the basic concept of a National Health Service in which risks and costs were shared. The vast majority of the public enthusiastically supported the great social advance embodied in the NHS.



New Story

THE government is to conduct the largest emergency exercise since the cold war on Tuesday to test whether it could cope in the event of a flu epidemic in Britain. Confidential plans have been circulated in Whitehall that will involve thousands of civil servants and officials from the emergency services. Some government advisers believe that a bird flu epidemic has overtaken terrorism as the biggest risk facing the country.


New Story


BRITISH doctors had written “Joseph” off, saying he was too old to be treated on the National Health Service. But, at 72, he flew to Asia for a double-lung transplant and now claims to be the oldest man in Britain to have survived the operation. Joseph — not his real name — is one of a growing number of Britons who, frustrated with NHS waiting lists, are venturing into the murky world of organ brokers offering kidneys and livers harvested from the poorest quarters of the world, sometimes illicitly. Buying an organ is illegal in Britain, but generally not in Asia.


New Story


THE article Rate your doctor, NHS asks patients (News, last week) lists “waiting too long for a liver transplant” as a possible reason for complaint, which suggests that waiting times for organs can be controlled by the NHS. Obtaining a donor organ — for which recipients are forever grateful — is dependent on the misfortune of others.


New Story


SOCIAL workers are placing obese children on the child protection register alongside victims thought to be at risk of sexual or physical abuse. In extreme cases children have been placed in foster care because their parents have contributed to the health problems of their offspring by failing to respond to medical advice.



New Story

Gordon Brown was accused yesterday of raiding dormant bank accounts to meet the increasing cost of holding the 2012 Olympic Games. The Conservative Party claimed that a Treasury e-mail disclosed proposals to distribute about £400 million of unclaimed assets to the Big Lottery Fund. The plans, expected to be published next week in a consultation paper on a new law on unclaimed assets, suggest that this could indirectly be used to fund the Olympics.

Additional Story

Brown 'to raid social funds for Olympics' - The Telegaph 27th January 2007



New Story

Work without pay, NHS ask - The Times 27th January 2007

A debt-ridden Kent hospital has suggested that staff work a day without pay to ease its financial woes. Maidstone and Tunbridge Wells NHS Trust, which reported a £16.7 million deficit last year, put the suggestion to staff in a letter from Terry Coode, director of human resources.


New Story

What if the doc doesn’t recognise a broken leg? My hero of the week is Robert Moore. He’s 49 and lives with his partner and dogs in Roker, near Sunderland. They have a holiday place in Scotland and love going for long walks there. The trouble is, Robert had both his legs broken on Christmas Eve in a hit-and-run outside his own front door.


New Story


Britain's army of alternative therapists is to be regulated by the Government under a crackdown on medical professionals who physically and sexually abuse their patients. A white paper on tackling rogue doctors, which is also expected to target alternative health practitioners, will be unveiled by health ministers next month.


Additional Story



Additional Story


Crackdown on therapists who abuse vulnerable - The Observer 28th January 2007


New Story


The NHS could save 800 lives a year by changing the way it treats older people, says a Government-backed report today. Preventing falls and looking after patients' needs better after an accident could stop 4,000 hip fractures a year and save strategic health authorities millions of pounds, it says.


Additional Story


Pensioner tsar backs A&E closure plans - Daily Mail 29th January 2007


Additional Story


Elderly 'content to travel further for care' - The Sunday Telegraph 28th January 2007


New Story


When Sophie Brodie fell ill a year ago, she blamed a 'bug'. Then she discovered that toxoplasmosis is not just a disease that affects pregnant women Bird flu may have the world in a flap, but it's a form of "cat flu", or toxoplasmosis, that's got my tongue.


New Story


Exercising without much oxygen might have huge benefits, but Bryony Gordon didn't like the sound of it one bit… What do you do when your boss tells you that, for your next assignment, you are going to run on a treadmill while simultaneously being deprived of oxygen? Cry? Resign? Feel offended because you thought that she liked you, but now it seems she wants you dead?



New Story


A boy of 12 is believed to have become the world's youngest sex change patient after convincing doctors that he wanted to live the rest of his life as a female. The boy - originally called Tim, but now known as Kim - has started to receive hormone treatment, in preparation for the operation that will eventually complete the sex change.


New Story


The row between the Churches and the Government hides the grim truth about adoption in Britain: that tens of thousands of children are denied the chance to live in a loving home. Shockingly, some councils refuse to put children up for adoption because of the cost Stephen is 10 years old, a bright boy with a troubled soul. He was taken into care in London, two years ago, away from his alcoholic parents who, for the flimsiest of reasons, subjected him to almost daily beatings with sticks, belts and - his father's favourite - a bicycle chain.

Additional Story

Adoption too expensive for local councils - The Sunday Telegraph 28th January 2007

Additional Story


Additional Story

Babies put in care 'for adoption targets' - The Telegraph 27th January 2007

Additional Story

Babies 'removed to meet targets' - BBC Health News 26th January 2007



New Story

A young disabled man who receives care for his life-limiting illness at a hospice run by a nun spoke yesterday of his decision to use a prostitute to experience sex before he dies. Sister Frances Dominica gave her support to 22-year-old Nick Wallis, who was born with Duchenne muscular dystrophy. Sufferers usually die by their thirties.
A man with a mission came to my Life Club this week. Self-employed and as charming as you have to be when you are self-employed, he wanted a change of career but was lacking confidence and dreading the thought of having to sell himself all over again. "It feels like a mountain," he told me. His metaphor for the future was of being surrounded by mountains, one of which he'd have to climb in order to get where he wanted.
New Stor


New S


Global warming could have one very unexpected - and unpleasant-side effect for Britons - the birth of the never-ending, all-year-round cold. While catching a cold used to mean sniffling and shivering for a few days before making a recovery, new evidence suggests that the common cold is lingering longer and longer.


New Story


Most NHS prescription charges in England should be scrapped and applied to 'ineffective treatments' instead, NHS public health chiefs say. The Association of Directors of Public Health said rising demands on the NHS will lead to more rationing.


New Story


Reform call for care of elderly - BBC Health News 28th January 2007


Reform is needed to ensure the UK copes with the burgeoning care demands of growing numbers of elderly people, an expert warns. By 2025, the number of over-85s will have risen by two thirds - increasing demand on health and social services.


New Story


Braces 'may not boost happiness' - BBC Health News January 28th 2007

Having braces to correct crooked teeth as a child does not improve mental well-being or quality of life in adulthood, a UK study suggests. A 20-year study found that orthodontic treatment had little positive impact on future psychological health.



New Story

A woman is suing the NHS 24 helpline service for £750,000 over the death of her partner, BBC Scotland has learned. Father-of-two Steven Wiseman died in December 2004 at the age of 30 after complaining of flu-like symptoms.
The ways in which light can be used to diagnose and treat disease is the focus of an international conference. The Medical Photonics workshop, being held at St Andrew's University next week, will examine how light can be used for a variety of techniques.


New Story

The NHS could claim back over £150m a year for treating employees injured at work, the government has said. The money would be recovered from insurance companies in cases where personal injury compensation has been paid to workers.


New Story


Children vulnerable to eating disorders are being put under increased pressure by the government's school dinner reforms, a teachers' union has said. The healthy eating plan in England has given bullies "seeming justification" to target children about their size, warns the NASUWT.


New Section


International News

New Story

Japan's health minister did nothing to endear himself to female voters over the weekend when he described women as "birth-giving machines" and implored them to "do their best" to halt the country's declining birthrate. In a speech to Liberal Democratic party members in western Japan, Hakuo Yanagisawa said women of child-bearing age should perform a public service by raising the birthrate, which fell to a record low of 1.26 children per woman in 2005. Experts say an average fertility rate of 2.1 children is needed to keep the population stable.


Diane von Furstenberg, inventor of the wrap dress, is leading the resistance to new rules about skinny models on the catwalk. Jess Cartner-Morley meets the designer in Paris

Additional Story




New Story


Exhausted and short of money, the world’s oldest mother is seeking a younger husband to be a father to her twins. In her first interview since giving birth last month, Carmela Bousada, a 67-year-old Spaniard, said that she had sold her house in Andalucia to raise the £30,000 to pay for fertility treatment at a California clinic, where she lied about her age. The clinic’s age limit is 55.



New Story

Why do some people risk their lives for others? It’s all in the brain “UNDERGROUND hero” was the big headline this week, with the story of the firefighter Angus Campbell, who challenged an alleged Tube bomber to protect his fellow passengers.


A frightening little study from Finland last week rang an old-fashioned alarm bell among those of us who are naturally suspicious of technology. It found that people with a particular type of brain tumour who have regularly used mobile phones for more than 10 years are 39 per cent more likely to have the tumour on the side where they hold their phones.


New Story


Too little fat 'can make children overweight' - Daily Mail 28th January 2007


Children who eat too little fat can end up overweight, a new study has found. Researchers in Sweden discovered that eating the right sort of fat kept the weight of children down.



New Story

Immune system 'brakes' found - BBC Health News January 28th 2007

Scientists say they have learnt how the body controls the machinery it uses to fight infections and foreign invaders. The advance, published in the journal Nature, may one day help find ways to tackle unwanted immune reactions following transplant surgery.



New Story

Men with gum disease have a 63% higher risk of developing pancreatic cancer, according to US researchers. The Harvard-based study suggests mouth bacteria, and the body's attempt to fight them, may produce carcinogenic chemicals which trigger disease.


New Story

Children will have access to improved treatment following changes to European laws, campaigners say. From this week, any new medicine licensed in Europe must be examined for its potential use for children.


New Story

Impotence fears hit polio drive - BBC Health News 25th January 2007

Health officials in Pakistan say they have failed to immunise over 160,000 children against polio due to rumours the vaccine causes sexual impotence. Parents in parts of northern Pakistan told the BBC news website they feared an "American conspiracy" to cut the fertility of the next generation.




New Section

Cheshire and Merseyside News

New Story
EXECUTIVES at a debt-ridden hospital have gone against the team brought into overhaul their finances by refusing to cut cleaning costs. The “turnaround team” sent to Southport and Ormskirk Hospital to sort out its ailing finances told it to reduce the amount spent on the vital service to help wipe out its £15m debt.


New Story

DETECTING and treating depression in cancer patients can improve their quality of life, tolerance of pain and give them a better chance of beating the disease, a University of Liverpool professor has revealed. Professor Mari Lloyd-Williams has devised a six-question survey to detect depression in cancer patients to help improve their ability to come to terms with their disease and overcome it.


New Story


A LIVERPOOL mother today told of her heartbreak at losing her second daughter to cystic fibrosis. Pauline Sweeney watched as her 24-year-old daughter Rachael lost her fight for life. Rachel’s twin sister Rebecca died of the disease when they were just six months old.


New Story


Pensioner Tony Hurst, 66, has to provide round-the-clock care for his 76 year old wife Betty, who suffers from Alzheimer's Disease. The only time he can afford for himself or to spend shopping and cleaning comes courtesy of the Lightfoot Lodge day centre and the respite care provided by a centre in Curzon Park.


New Story

Barbara Buckley and her family have had their fair share of heartache over the years. Last year Barbara, 53, who suffers from heart disease, emphysema and has only one functioning kidney was told her condition had seriously deteriorated and she has only two years left to live. The organisation caring for her and her family, Care UK, decided to try and make her two last wishes come true.


New Story

SOUTHPORT people have been urged to embrace the joys of home cooking if they want to lead healthy lives. That was the main finding of a food safety investigation carried out across Merseyside, which sampled levels of salt and sodium in a variety of fare looked at in premises from independent shops to supermarkets. Officers from Sefton Council’s environmental protection department were among those taking part.


New Story

A DRUG screening company is being launched in Widnes to help employers tackle the problem of drug and alcohol abuse in the work place. David Coleman, the proprietor of Cheshire Screening Services in Waterloo Road, is expecting a busy opening week as companies in Widnes and Runcorn take advantage of his 'unique' new business.


New Story

Go-ahead for care village for elderly - Ellesmere Port Pioneer 25th January 2007

A NEW development for the elderly in Ellesmere Port has been approved. The extra-care village, with 71 self-contained residential units, will be built at New Grosvenor Road in the Westminster area of town.

New Section

Cumbria and Lancashire News

New Story
Doctors’ fury at moves to send NHS patients to private firm - Lancashire Telegraph 28th January 2007

ANGRY doctors confronted health bosses over plans to send NHS operations to a private firm. They said the move risked breaking key links between patients and NHS doctors. And an NHS boss said she agreed and had "real problems" with how the plans will work.


Disabled services to be audited - Carlisle News and Star 26th January 2007

CUMBRIANS with experience of learning disabilities are being urged to get involved in the largest audit undertaken in England. The Healthcare Commission, which is running the audit looking at services available in each area, wants to hear from people with learning disabilities, their family members, carers and health workers.


New Story


COUNTY council chiefs have drawn up an action plan to get sick and disabled people back into work. They want to make it easier for people to find employment after a survey revealed Cumbria lagged behind the national average for the proportion of disabled people with full-time jobs.


New Story

THREE people who supplied thousands of chocolate bars laced with cannabis to multiple sclerosis sufferers walked free from court today. Mark Gibson, his wife Lezley, both 42, who has multiple sclerosis (MS), from Alston, and Marcus Davies, 36, were each given a nine-month jail term, suspended for two years.

Additional Story

Couple escape jail over MS cannabis bars - The Guardian 26th January 2007

New Story

YOU live in a house where sensors monitor what time you get up, when you go to bed, whether you remembered to turn off the cooker. It sounds like a scene from Big Brother but this is daily life for 76 elderly people in north Cumbria. And it could be part of the future for many of us.


New Story

A WHITEHAVEN man who died after taking a drugs overdose in hospital would still be alive today if he’d been kept in the A&E department, a court heard. Handyman Peter Weighman had taken an overdose of 50 co-praxamol tablets on the Yewdale ward at the West Cumberland Hospital in September 2002 and then made his own way to the A&E department.


New Story

BLACKBURN and Darwen health bosses have spent £470,000 in four-and-half years on drugs that stop obese people feeling hungry, it has been revealed. The spend, by the borough's primary care trust, has been labelled "phenomenal" and a "waste of money".


New Story

WHEN Keith Ditchfield was told he had a cancerous tumour on his right kidney his reaction was, unsurprisingly, one of utter devastation. Yet he said he took for granted that the NHS would do all it could to help him, bringing some comfort that whatever the outlook, he was in the best care.


New Story

GPs asked to open longer to help A&E - Lancashire Telegraph 27th January 2007

FAMILY doctors have been asked if they will stay open until 9pm to take the pressure off struggling A&E departments. A letter has been sent to surgeries in Blackburn with Darwen asking if they will consider the move.

New Section

Greater Manchester News


Hospital bosses have no problem with parking - The Bolton News 28th January 2007

AS a Bolton resident and a member of hospital staff, I found the parking fine for the nurse in The Bolton News (Tuesday, January 23) very disturbing. The staff pay £10 per month with no promise of a parking place.


New Story

Call to save maternity unit - The Bolton News 26th January 2007

SALFORD Council chiefs are continuing their fight to save the city's hospital maternity ward. They have called on Health Secretary Patricia Hewitt to review the decision to close the unit at Hope Hospital.

Additional Story

Blears stays clear of Hope demo - Manchester Evening News 25th January 2007

New Section


Podcast


Listen to this edition of Another 15 Minutes...Health News from Fade Listen toMonday's edition of Another 15 Minutes...Health News from Fade
Listen to this edition of Another 15 Minutes...Health News from Fade Listen to Sunday's edition of Another 15 Minutes...Health News from Fade
Listen to this edition of Another 15 Minutes...Health News from Fade Listen to Saturday's edition of Another 15 Minutes...Health News from Fade

Friday, January 26, 2007

Another 15 Minutes...Health News from Fade



Another 15 Minutes is currently experiencing navigation issues as a result of software changes, as soon as we identify a solution the navigation menu will return, we apologise for any inconvenience this causes.



Listen to this edition of Another 15 Minutes...Health News from Fade Listen to this edition of Another 15 Minutes...Health News from Fade

New Section


National News

New Story


Government advice to pregnant women to cut back on caffeine may be too cautious, according to new research. Pregnant women are advised to drink no more than three mugs of instant coffee a day and are often urged to cut out caffeine altogether because of fears that it can cause premature birth and low birth weight.


Additional Story


Carry on with the coffee, pregnant women are told - Daily Mail 25th January 2007


Additional Story


Pregnancy caffeine 'reassurance' - BBC Health News 26th January 2007


New Story


The father of a 13-month-old boy who died after "incomplete information" was passed from one hospital to another is considering suing a hospital trust. An inquest heard how Zia Islam's son, Ahil, waited for hours for medical help and was then treated for a chest infection when in fact he had blood poisoning.


Additional Story


Father may sue after baby dies in hospital - The Telegraph 26th January 2007


New Story


Like Prof John Fabre (Letters, January 24) I have a GP wife. Her partnership's recruitment of salaried GPs is based not on avarice, as he suggests, but on the market force of reluctant recruits. Today's successful self-employed GP partners need to be visionary entrepreneurs, tight-disciplined business administrators, IT/telecoms analysts, shrewd buyers, motivational leaders, HR managers, local health political schmoozers and national health political second-guessers. Top that with a long-term commitment to the partnership, the role of mother as most GPs are female, and the small matter of sympathetically eared patient contact and the diagnostic doctor bit. Quite a skill set. Most young GPs shirk full responsibility, opting only for medicine and mothering down a salaried, flexible route, leaving the rest to the established partners. My wife's practice has tried to tempt salaried GPs into full partnership, They are having none of it.


New Story


Anthony McCarthy (Letters, January 20) is mistaken to suppose that all those who wish to be assisted in dying - whether by act or omission - simply need access to palliative care. Indeed the 2004-05 House of Lords select committee concluded that a small but significant group of determined, terminally ill individuals are "unlikely to be deflected from their wish to end their lives by more or better palliative care". The BMA and even the National Council for Palliative Care have expressed similar sentiments.


New Story


Stroke patients who are treated in specialised units are almost 20 per cent less likely to die or suffer disability than those on conventional wards, according to a recent study. The study, which was carried out in Italy and published in The Lancet, followed more than 11,000 patients who had suffered strokes and had been admitted to hospital within 48 hours.


New Story


The NHS is to pursue employers to recover the cost of treating employees injured at work, ministers will announce today. Rules that allow the NHS to claim back money for patients who have been paid personal injury compensation could see more than £150 million refunded each year, the Government says. But insurers, who will bear the brunt of the costs, gave warning yesterday that the move could provoke a multimillion-pound increase in premiums.


New Story


More than 300 passengers and crew on the cruise ship Queen Elizabeth 2 have caught the highly infectious norovirus during a world cruise. In what health officials have called an unusually large outbreak, nearly 17 per cent of the 1,652 predominantly American passengers on the Cunard Line’s flagship were confined to their cabins for two or three days by the bug that causes vomiting and diarrhoea.


Additional Story



Additional Story


Once again, the so-called "skinny models" debate is sandwiched between famine in Africa and yet another salvo from the government in the war against obesity in our children, says Hilary Alexander in an online exclusive


Additional Story


Youngsters in Britain consume more sweets and fizzy drinks than any others in Europe, fuelling an obesity crisis linked to ill health and early death. Ten to 13-year-olds eat an average of £128.40 of confectionery a year - which is equivalent to 1,167 two-finger KitKat bars or almost 400 Cadbury Creme Eggs.


New Story


Pregnant women who take folic acid can dramatically cut the chances of their baby having a harelip, say researchers. Mothers-to-be are already advised to take supplements of the B vitamin to help prevent conditions such as spina bifida.


New Story


Obese people are gorging themselves in order to qualify for stomach-stapling surgery on the NHS. Overweight patients are being forced to pile on the pounds after trusts raised the level of obesity they must reach to get the treatment, a patients' association claimed yesterday.


New Story


It is the magic bean that has virtually all the health benefits of eating meat, but none of the blood and gore. Edamame (or soya beans), which looks something like a cross between a broad bean and a pea, is being hailed as a new super-food. Soya beans have been used for generations in food manufacture and as a meat alternative for vegetarians. However, the humble bean has been given a make-over, dressed up with a new name and sold as a green vegetable in its own right.


New Story


Measures to cut the risk of cot death must be taken for day-time naps as well as night-time sleeps, expert say. Researchers said this includes both the advice that babies should sleep on their backs and that they should be in the same room as their parents.


New Story


Warning over temporary nurse use - BBC Health News 25th January 2007


A public sector watchdog has warned health officials to monitor their use of temporary nurses. Audit Scotland highlighted the growing use of bank nursing staff by NHS bosses as a way to cope with staff shortages.

New Section


International News

New Story

New fears of the harmful effects of traffic emissions are raised today in a major study linking motorway pollution with permanent and life-limiting damage to children's lungs. People who live within 500 metres of a motorway grow up with significantly reduced lung capacity, and even children who have never experienced asthma are at risk, scientists warn. Environmental campaigners described the research published by the Lancet as a "bombshell" and the Liberal Democrats said it provided fresh impetus to reduce car emissions. Government health officials are considering the findings to decide if any action is needed.


Additional Story




New Story


Smokers who suffer damage to a particular part of the brain can give up quickly and easily without feeling any urge for a cigarette, according to research that promises new approaches to treating nicotine addiction. A study of smokers who suffered strokes has shown that part of the brain, the insula, appears to be intimately involved in their addiction, indicating that it could be targeted to help people to give up the habit.


Additional Story



Additional Story



New Section


Cheshire and Merseyside News

New Story


A PIONEERING crackdown on anti-social behaviour and drug crime has led to more than 1,000 arrests by Merseyside police. The landmark figure was revealed yesterday as the force announced its Total Policing operation had also broken the record for the highest number of arrests in any single day.


New Story


Two of three NHS trusts without a boss - Warrington Guardian 25th January 2007


TWO of the town's three NHS trusts remain without bosses at the helm. Both Judith Holbrey, chief executive of the 5 Boroughs Partnership NHS Trust, Warrington's mental healthcare service provider, and Allison Cooke, boss of Warrington Primary Care Trust, quit their posts in December.

New Section


Cumbria and Lancashire News

New Story


A POISONS expert says a man who died of an overdose at Whitehaven’s West Cumberland Hospital would have survived if he had been given the proper treatment, a court heard. Dr Simon Thomas, of Newcastle’s Freeman Hospital, was giving evidence at the trial of Peter Fisher at Carlisle Crown Court.


New Story


HUNDREDS of pupils at Cumbrian primary schools will be given pedometers in a bid to tackle child obesity. The Government is to dish out the devices, which allow children to keep track of how far they have walked each day, in an attempt to encourage physical activity.


New Story


STAFF at north Cumbria’s main hospitals will not be expected to police the controversial no-smoking ban which recently came into force. In September bosses outlawed smoking at both the Cumberland Infirmary, Carlisle, and the West Cumberland Hospital, Whitehaven.


New Story


220 hospital jobs under threat - Chorley Citizen 25th January 2007


AT least 220 hospital jobs in Lancashire will be at risk under controversial plans to use a private firm to treat NHS patients, a senior manager has warned. A leaked document states up to 360 posts could go at Chorley and South Ribble District General Hospital and Royal Preston Hospital.

New Section


Greater Manchester News

New Story

MP Ivan Lewis is Labour's junior health minister responsible for maternity services. It says so on the Department of Health website. As he is proud to claim in his Bury Times letter last week, the policy he is responsible for is designed to reduce the overall number of maternity units.


I am disgusted at the decision to close wards in hospitals all around the country to save money. In my own hospital, Fairfield in Bury, they plan to close children's wards including the special care baby unit.


NEW Year resolutions to embark on a healthy lifestyle may have already fallen by the wayside, but help is now just a phone call away thanks to the launch of Bury's Health Trainers. Advice on healthy eating, quitting smoking and becoming more active are just some of topics the 40 trainers can offer.


BURY residents are being invited to have their say on the future of mental care services at Fairfield Hospital. Pennine Care NHS Trust, which provides mental health and specialist substance misuse services at hospitals across the region, is planning on becoming a Foundation Trust to allow people to become "members" of the trust and be consulted on plans for future developments.


FOOTBALLERS at Bolton Wanderers have signed up to help people suffering from mental health problems. Manager Sam Allardyce and his players said the issue, particularly depression among men, was a serious one.


New Story


Hospital staff in protest at £3.7m cuts plan - The Bolton News 25th January 2007


PROTESTERS angry at proposed cuts in jobs and services gathered outside the Royal Bolton Hospital to demonstrate. The protest was organised by the hospital's biggest staff union, Unison, and began outside Bolton's Trinity Street train station.


Podcast


Listen to this edition of Another 15 Minutes...Health News from Fade Listen to this edition of Another 15 Minutes...Health News from Fade

Thursday, January 25, 2007

Another 15 Minutes...Health News from Fade



Another 15 Minutes is currently experiencing navigation issues as a result of software changes, as soon as we identify a solution the navigation menu will return, we apologise for any inconvenience this causes.


Listen to this edition of Another 15 Minutes...Health News from Fade Listen to this edition of Another 15 Minutes...Health News from Fade

New Section


National News

New Story


Father tells how toddler died in hospital after minor burns - The Guardian 25th January 2007


The father of a toddler who died after enduring a four-hour wait for hospital treatment told an inquest that "nobody took any notice" of his son's deteriorating health. One-year-old Ahil Islam developed a fever after being scalded by tea on September 30 2005, and was taken to hospital in Watford, Hertfordshire. At some point after burning his neck, chest and arm, he contracted the staphylococcus aureus infection, which poisoned his blood.


Additional Story


Burns toddler died after a four-hour wait in hospital - The Times 25th January 2007


New Story


Ministers slow to act on child obesity, warn MPs - The Guardian 25th January 2007


Efforts to tackle the obesity epidemic in children are confused, slow-paced and hampered by ministers' attempts to stay friendly with the food industry, a parliamentary watchdog will warn today. MPs on the Commons public accounts committee will call for the appointment of an "obesity tsar" to galvanise a public health drive and say parents must be given clearer guidelines about what to do if their children are obese. More pressure must also be put on food manufacturers to produce healthier brands, the MPs' report insists.


Additional Story


Strategy to cut childhood obesity mired in 'confusion' - The Independent 25th January 2007


Additional Story


Obesity target unlikely to be met - BBC Health News 25th January 2007


New Story


Patients overeat to qualify for weight surgery, says charity - The Guardian 25th January 2007


Some obese people are eating more fatty foods to qualify for weight reduction surgery on the NHS, a health charity claimed yesterday. Patients who are severely or morbidly obese - but not quite big enough for an operation - are trying to put on weight, according to the British Obesity Surgery Patient Association (Bospa). Health trusts' criteria for surgery differ, leaving obese people confused and angry, says Bospa. Obesity is measured according to the body mass index (BMI), which is calculated by dividing the patient's weight in kilos by their height in metres squared. A score of 35-40 is regarded as clinically obese, while 40-45 is morbidly obese.


New Story


Daytime naps with parent reduce cot death risk - The Guardian 25th January 2007


Babies should be put down for their daytime naps in the same room as their parents to minimise the risk of cot deaths, according to research published yesterday. A three-year study, part-funded by the Foundation for the Study of Infant Deaths (FSID), has found that three-quarters of babies who die while taking their daytime naps have been put down in rooms alone. The findings contradict advice by the controversial childcare guru Gina Ford, who recommends putting babies to sleep in their own room from birth.


New Story


London fashion week refuses to ban ultra-thin models - The Guardian 25th January 2007


The British fashion industry is ready to defy the government by refusing to rule out the controversial use of ultra-thin models on the catwalk. Organisers of London Fashion Week say they will not dictate to influential international designers about the models they use when they show their winter collections in the UK in two weeks' time.


New Story


Health warning over counterfeit condoms - Daily Mail 24th January 2007


A health warning has been issued after fake condoms were found in a shop. Packets of "Durexx Gossamer" were seized by trading standards from a shop in Walsall, near Birmingham.


New Story


Average woman spends 31 years on a diet, researchers say - Daily Mail 24th January 2007


For many women struggling to keep slim, dieting can seem to last a lifetime. Or to be more precise, 31 years. For researchers have found that is how long the average woman spends on a diet over the course of her life.


New Story


The women robbed of motherhood by a needless hysterectomy - Daily Mail 24th January 2007


Thousands of women may be having unnecessary hysterectomies because doctors are offering out of date advice, experts claimed yesterday. Women as young as 19 are being given surgery that will end their hopes of mothehood rather than alternative treatments that would allow them to keep their wombs.


New Story


Statins won't prevent women getting heart disease, claim doctors - Daily Mail 23rd January 2007


Doubts were have been cast on the value of "wonder drugs" prescribed to millions of Britons to prevent heart disease deaths. A new study claims there is no evidence to show that giving statins to women keeps them free of heart disease.


New Story


Patient forum changes 'will fail' - BBC Health News 25th January 2007


Changes to how the public has its say on the running of the NHS are set to fail because of a lack of funding, leading doctors have said. The British Medical Association said the structure of Local Involvement Networks (Links) was flawed and open to unacceptable variations.


New Story


Health support for deaf people - BBC Health News 24th January 2007


A leading charity says it is to build four residential mental health units to provide specialist care for deaf people. The Royal National Institute for Deaf people (RNID) wants to tackle what it calls "the crisis" in mental health provision.


New Story


Most support voluntary euthanasia - BBC Health News 24th January 2007


Eight out of ten of people support a law change to allow doctors to actively end the lives of terminally ill patients who want to die, a poll shows. However only 60% supported doctors prescribing, but not administering, drugs someone could use to end their own life.


New Story


Watchdog probes ambulance service - BBC Health News 24th January 2007


Staffordshire Ambulance Service NHS Trust is being investigated after serious concerns were raised about its service, a health watchdog said. The Healthcare Commission said management, the community first responder scheme and managing medicines are among the matters highlighted.


New Story


Young women 'complacent over HIV' - BBC Health News 24th January 2007


Seven out of 10 young women do not believe they are at any risk of being infected with HIV, a survey has found. The poll, commissioned by The Body Shop and MTV, also found 92% do not think a condom is an essential handbag item on a night out.


New Story


Bowel cancer drug appeal rejected - BBC Health News 24th January 2007


Campaigners have lost an appeal to make a bowel cancer drug widely available on the NHS. Charities Cancerbackup and Bowel Cancer UK appealed against a decision by the health watchdog to reject the drug Erbitux (cetuximab) for use on the NHS.

New Section


International News

New Story


Spanish shop dummies to put on weight - The Guardian 25th January 2007


Spanish shop window dummies have been ordered to fatten up after the government and big fashion chains agreed that female dummies should wear size 10 clothes or above. The agreement between Spanish retail chains such as Zara and Mango and the country's health ministry came as the fashion trade agreed to a series of measures designed to combat anorexia.


New Story


Scientists discover how to activate genetic 'switch' that stops cancer - The Independent 25th January 2007


A way of ridding the body of lethal tumours has been identified by scientists who have used a genetic "switch" to turn on a key gene for suppressing cancer. The findings suggest there may be a way of re-activating a damaged gene that is normally involved in the natural suppression of the uncontrolled cell division that leads to cancer.


Additional Story


Gene switch makes tumours shrink - BBC Health News 25th January 2007

New Section


Cheshire and Merseyside News

New Story


Elderly will receive MRSA blood checks - Liverpool Echo 24th January 2007


LIVERPOOL’S elderly are to be screened for MRSA to keep the superbug out of hospitals. The sweep will be the first of its kind in the country and will include tests on other groups considered at risk.


New Story


Patients’ anger as car park fee row rumbles on - Liverpool Echo 24th January 2007


DISABLED people are still being forced to walk from a car park – months after health bosses promised to end their misery. The car park at Broadgreen hospital charges blue badge holders a minimum of £2 and means some patients face a 10-minute, uphill struggle to reach hospital buildings.

New Section


Cumbria and Lancashire News

New Story


Abortion doctor has not found any work - Carlisle News & Star 24th January 2007


A FORMER Carlisle gynaecologist who left a 21-year-old woman with internal injuries in a botched abortion has been unable to comply with strict conditions imposed on him to allow him to continue working. Andrew Gbinigie, 51, has not worked since 2003 when he escaped being struck off amid public uproar following a string of blunders.


New Story


To the top with surgical skill - Lancashire Telegraph 24th January 2007


WHEN Blackburn oral surgeon Maire Morton went to medical school she was one of only a handful of women in her class. Three decades later and she has risen to the top of her specialism - being appointed as the first-ever woman president of the British Association of Oral and Maxillo-Facial Surgeons.

New Section


Greater Manchester News

New Story


Hospital cuts and services protest demo - The Bolton News 24th January 2007


Angry demonstrators walked from the town centre to the Royal Bolton Hospital to protest at the latest proposed cuts in jobs and services. The demo, organised by the biggest staff union at the hospital, Unison, began outside Bolton train station.


Additional Story


Hospital cuts protest demo - The Bolton News 24th January 2007


New Story


Children to get pedometers in fitness drive - The Bolton News 24th January 2007


THOUSANDS of children in the poorest parts of the country will be given pedometers to encourage them to get fit, the Government has announced. Giving children pedometers, which count the number of steps an individual takes, can improve a whole family's attitude to fitness as enthusiastic youngsters persuade parents to join them walking, ministers said.


New Story


Sugary foods may be back on menu - The Bolton News 24th January 2007


CREAM cakes, chocolate bars and sugary snacks are banned foods for diabetics. But not any more, thanks to a course run by Bolton health chiefs.


New Story


Specialist clinics are a threat to NHS - The Bolton News 24th January 2007


A DOCTORS' association has branded plans to privatise some services at the Royal Bolton Hospital "a threat" to the NHS. The British Medical Association is concerned that initial tests in ear, nose and throat, urology, gynaecology, general surgery and orthopaedics at Bolton and across Greater Manchester are to be carried out in private Integrated Clinical Assessment and Treatment Services (ICATS) centres.


New Story


‘More action needed to tackle obesity’ - The Bolton News 24th January 2007


ONE of Bolton's leading health bosses is urging parents, the Government, schools and the NHS to work together in a bid to beat childhood obesity. Jan Hutchinson, director of public health for Bolton Primary Care Trust, said practical solutions must be offered if the problem of overweight children is to be tackled properly.

New Section


Podcast


Listen to this edition of Another 15 Minutes...Health News from Fade Listen to this edition of Another 15 Minutes...Health News from Fade

Wednesday, January 24, 2007

Another 15 Minutes...Health News from Fade



Another 15 Minutes is currently experiencing navigation issues as a result of software changes, as soon as we identify a solution the navigation menu will return, we apologise for any inconvenience this causes.



Listen to this edition of Another 15 Minutes...Health News from Fade Listen to this edition of Another 15 Minutes...Health News from Fade

New Section


National News

New Story


Pfizer blames job losses on NHS cost cuts - The Guardian 24th January 2007


Pfizer is cutting around 250 jobs in the UK, blaming cost reduction measures by the NHS, as the drug maker embarks on a campaign to shed 10,000 staff worldwide. Announcing the UK cuts yesterday, Pfizer said: "Financial deficits in the National Health Service have resulted in a concerted effort to cut medicines' costs through increased use of older, cheaper generics. This shift away from prescription of new, more effective medicines - in particular, the pressure applied by the Department of Health to switch the majority of UK patients to generic statins - has caused Pfizer to reconsider the number of roles required to support the UK business."


New Story


Infected by affluenza - The Guardian 24th January 2007


Blair's encouragement of free market capitalism has boosted spiralling levels of British mental illness.


New Story


Mary O'Hara on the need for a rethink on disability discrimination legislation - The Guardian 24th January 2007


Despite longstanding legislation against disability discrimination, serious prejudice and misunderstanding still exist. With one in five adults classed as disabled, a government rethink is needed. Mary O'Hara reports


New Story


GPs playing government at its own game - The Guardian 24th January 2007


Most GPs, my wife among them, will feel aggrieved at their portrayal by Polly Toynbee as overpaid, money-driven and sometimes dishonest (Comment, January 19). However, she has hit precisely (if painfully) at the heart of the current malaise in general practice. The combination of a government obsessed with creating a business ethic in the NHS, and misguided negotiators at the BMA, has in the space of just a few years created a sorry mess which seriously threatens the future of general practice.


New Story


Natural selection will save the NHS - The Guardian 24th January 2007


Received wisdom has it that introduction of general management in the NHS in the 1980s was a good thing. But Aidan Halligan, the former NHS director of clinical governance who quit the Department of Health last year, has come to the view that putting doctors and nurses in charge is the only way to save the service.


New Story


Get physical: Healthy primary school - The Guardian 24th January 2007


With everything from classroom aerobics to healthy snacks introduced to the school day, St Leonard's primary school near Burnley has seen pupils' health greatly improved. Julie Bradley became headteacher of St Leonard's primary school, near Burnley, in 2000. She immediately noticed that her pupils seemed to lack vitality and stamina and, together with her staff, set about improving things.

Pedometers for 'deprived' pupils - BBC Health News 24th January 2007


New Story


Letters extra - The Guardian 24th January 2007


"These are practices that were out of date 20 years ago," writes David Brindle. When I retired from Buckinghamshire social services 23 years ago, highly trained and supervised people staffed establishments for children, the elderly and people with learning difficulties. There were home advisers who made regular visits, staff were seconded to college courses and there was in-house training. It may be better for social services departments to resume responsibility, with appropriate funding, as suggested in Mr Brindle's article. Practice was of a high standard 23 years ago, so why not now?


New Story


David Walker on why we should embrace data sharing - The Guardian 24th January 2007


"Is this reluctance to embrace opportunities a result of the mistrust fired on all matters of data and IT? " In theory, we can make appointments with GPs. Some practices send or phone a reminder - just as your friendly, neighbourhood (you wish!) dentist and the blood donation service already do. But to issue text messages, or even automated voice messages, surgeries need to store data, names and numbers. And the association of the state - even in the benign form of the NHS - and hard disks gives certain commentators fits.


New Story


Four out of five want to give doctors right to end life of terminally ill patients in pain - The Guardian January 24th 2007


Four out of five people in Britain believe the law should allow a doctor to end the life of a terminally ill patient who is in pain if they wish to die. In a finding confirming that British public opinion is at odds with the law, today's British Social Attitudes Survey reveals strong support for euthanasia, though only in carefully defined circumstances.

80% of public support right to die with doctor's help - The Times 24th January 2007


New Story


Anti-smoking drug triples success - The Guardian 24th January 2007


An anti-smoking drug launched in Britain last month improves the odds of people quitting threefold, according to a comprehensive survey of trials. Scientists at Oxford who pronounce on the effectiveness of new medical treatments by analysing published clinical data, found that varenicline, marketed by Pfizer under the name Champix, reduced smokers' cravings and boosted their chances of giving up over a 12-month period.


New Story


High-fibre diet 'can cut cancer risk for women under 50' - The Independent 24th January 2007


A breakfast bowl of muesli, wholemeal sandwiches at lunch and fruit in the evening could halve a woman's risk of developing breast cancer. Researchers have found that younger women who eat a high-fibre diet appear to be protected against the disease - at least until the menopause.

Fibre 'lowers breast cancer risk' - BBC Health News 24th January 2007


New Story


Doctors 'send too many women for hysterectomies' - The Times 24th January 2007


Too many women are having hysterectomies when other treatments are available, the Government’s healthcare advisers said. The National Institute for Health and Clinical Excellence (NICE) issued guidance yesterday to the NHS on treatments to treat heavy menstrual bleeding (HMB). One in four women in England has menstrual problems during her lifetime, and an estimated 6.5 per cent of women aged 21 to 51 suffer HMB.

No hysterectomy for heavy periods - BBC Health News 24th January 2007


New Story


Is the NHS fit for purpose in a modern Britain? - The Times 24th January 2007


“An honest and open debate about what kind of National Health Service the public wants” (letter, Jan 22) would be dominated by emotional commitments to the existing sacred cow. The question should be, do we want a “national” health service at all; any more than a national steel industry or a national food industry. Admittedly, the current structure is an unholy mess of mixed concepts and unworkable constraints, but this is inevitably because of the prevailing blinkered view.


New Story


Hope for ME - The Times 24th January 2007


Sufferers from ME (myalgic encephalomyelitis) should feel more optimistic than ever that researchers will find a solution to this complex neurological illness now that they are talking about brains, drugs and gene studies rather than hysteria and depression, and that doctors will now accept that ME never was “all in the mind” (report, Jan 22).


New Story


The new plastic implant that restores perfect sight - Daily Mail 23rd January 2007


More than 23 million people in Britain suffer from presbyopia - a form of longsightedness which usually affects those aged 40 and over. Until recently, it's been impossible to cure it, and most people had to use reading glasses. But now, lens implants remove the need for spectacles.


New Story


My brother my saviour - Daily Mail 23rd January 2007


On November 30, 2003, Allison and David Hartley were asked to go to Great Ormond Street Hospital for Children in London, where two of their sons were being treated for anaemia. Their consultant delivered a bombshell: although the Hartleys' other two sons were apparently healthy, all four boys had a rare genetic disorder, X-linked lymphoproliferative syndrome (XLP) which would kill them all within ten years.


New Story


Have we been conned about cholesterol? - Daily Mail 22nd January 2007


Conventional medical wisdom about cholesterol — and the role of statins — is now being challenged by a small, but growing number of health professionals. Among them is Dr Malcolm Kendrick. A GP for 25 years, he has also worked with the European Society of Cardiology, and writes for leading medical magazines.


New Story


What a waste! The NHS spends millions on training, but we are recruiting from overseas - Daily Mail 22nd January 2007


An official document leaked earlier this month predicted huge staff shortages in the NHS by 2010. What makes this so extraordinary is there are thousands of newly qualified health professionals struggling to find work. Meanwhile, hundreds of foreign doctors are being recruited to work in GP surgeries. Not only does this demonstrate an appalling lack of planning, say experts, but it's an enormous waste of NHS money. How has this situation arisen?


New Story


Child diabetes care 'worsening' - BBC Health News 24th January 2007


Many children with diabetes are at risk of losing limbs because the financial problems of the NHS in England are hitting services, a charity warns. Diabetes UK says 80% of children with diabetes have poor glucose control - putting them at risk of complications.


New Story


Safety fears over 'wheelie shoes' - BBC Health News 23rd January 2007


An accident and emergency consultant has warned of the dangers of the kids' footwear craze Heelys. Almost a dozen children have turned up with injuries at a Belfast hospital after falling while using the trainers, which have wheels in the heel.


New Story


Rights case over foetus pictures - BBC Health News 23rd January 2007


An anti-abortion campaigner is claiming her human rights were breached when she was convicted for sending pictures of aborted foetuses to chemists. Veronica Connolly was convicted in 2005 for sending the "offensive" pictures to chemists in Solihull, West Midlands who sold the morning-after pill.


New Story


Elderly man's fall 'led to death' - BBC Health News 23rd January 2007


Hospital procedures in Devon are to be reviewed after the death of an elderly man who fell down at least five times. It follows an inquest into the death of 93-year-old Stan Rogers from Old Rydon Lane, Exeter, who broke his hip in a fall at Whipton Community Hospital.


New Story


Tories ponder nurse job guarantee - BBC Health News 23rd January 2007


Graduate nurses could be given a guarantee of one-year employment under a Tory government, David Cameron says. The Tory leader told a nurses conference it would allow them to gain the necessary experience to work elsewhere if there were no NHS jobs.


New Story


Website 'to offer surgery choice' - BBC Health News 23rd January 2007


The government has announced that a website is to be set up this year to give patients more choice over the hospitals they use for some surgery. It will contain information and links to help people decide on which centre might suit them best.


New Story


Call to save military hospitals - BBC Health News 23rd January 2007


The former head of the British army has called on the government to maintain military hospitals. In an interview on BBC Two's Newsnight, Sir Mike Jackson said personnel were "better off" in dedicated facilities.


New Story


AMs vote for free prescriptions - BBC Health News 23rd January 2007


Free prescriptions for everyone are to be introduced in Wales from 1 April following a vote in the Welsh assembly. AMs voted by 39 to none to abolish the charges. Labour and Plaid Cymru supported the move while Conservatives and Liberal Democrats abstained.


New Story


NHS head admits contract mistakes - BBC Health News 23rd January 2007


The head of the health service in Scotland has admitted that significant mistakes were made in drawing up the new contract for NHS consultants. The deal has cost an extra £235m - four times the original estimate.

New Section


International News

New Story


Adults' antidepressant bone risk - BBC Health News 23rd January 2007


Adults over 50 who use a type of antidepressants are at double the risk of bone fractures, a study suggests. The Canadian researchers focused on selective serotonin reuptake inhibitors (SSRIs) including drugs such as Prozac and Seroxat.


New Story


Call for deadly TB isolation move - BBC Health News 23rd January 2007


South Africa should forcibly isolate patients infected with a deadly strain of TB to stop the disease spreading on the HIV-hit continent, experts say. South Africa's outbreak of the multi drug-resistant XDR-TB has killed at least 74 people in the past few months.


New Story


Man has partial face transplant - BBC Health News 23rd January 2007


French doctors have performed a partial face transplant on a 29-year-old man in the third operation of its type. The patient, who doctors say is doing well, suffered from a genetic condition called neurofibromatosis, which seriously disfigured his face.

New Section


Cheshire and Merseyside News

New Story


Hospital chief quits before £500m plans are finalised - Liverpool Daily Post 24th January 2007


THE chief executive of Liverpool's biggest hospital has resigned two years before £500m plans for it to be rebuilt are due to be finalised. Maggie Boyle announced yesterday she is leaving the Royal Liverpool and Broadgreen Hospitals NHS Trust after four-and-a-half years in the job.


New Story


Royal Hospital is top in food tests - Liverpool Echo 23rd January 2007


THE Royal Liverpool hospital has beaten a private hospital in tough food hygiene tests. Staff were celebrating today after the hospital’s catering facilities got a top five-star rating, while Lourdes private hospital only got three stars under Liverpool city council’s "Scores on the Doors" website.

New Section


Cumbria and Lancashire News

New Story


Psychiatrist implied lethal overdose ‘not significant’ - Carlisle News & Star 23rd January 2007


A DOCTOR told a court yesterday how a psychiatrist accused of the manslaughter of a patient gave the impression the overdose that would kill him was “not significant”. Charles Brett also said he did not know Peter Fisher was unregistered, adding he would not let such a person work in his department at Whitehaven’s West Cumberland Hospital.


New Story


Course is big help for doctors and nurses - Lancashire Telegraph 23rd January 2007


HOSPITAL staff have praised a new training course aimed at taking the load off doctors and nurses. They are among the first to complete the two-year assistant practitioner foundation degree programme at the University of Central Lancashire.


New Story


Health bosses defend private operations plan - Lancashire Telegraph 23rd January 2007


HEALTH chiefs have defended plans to send 45,000 patients to a private firm for operations using £23million of NHS cash Bosses from Blackburn with Darwen Primary Care Trust told councillors last night that the move was essential to hit a key waiting time target. They spoke after The Lancashire Telegraph yesterday revealed a letter from East Lancashire's four most senior hospital consultants to the area's GPs which said taking operations elsewhere would see NHS services fall apart.


New Story


Boss is joining health board - Lancashire Telegraph 23rd January 2007


A WHALLEY-based mental health authority has welcomed a new board member. John Cowdall has been appointed a non-executive director of Calderstones NHS Trust.


New Story


GP’s pledge to improve community health - Lancashire Telegraph 23rd January 2007


A BURNLEY GP has been chosen to lead an influential group of clinical experts who advise community health decision-makers in East Lancashire. Dr Swamy Narayana, has pledged to shape the future of community health services for the better with a hands on approach.


New Story


NHS should copy Europe healthcare - Lancashire Telegraph 23rd January 2007


A LONG time ago the NHS was created. The service was the envy of most of the world because it gave support and care to us all at that time finance, and the general overall structure of the scheme was equal to demand made on it.

New Section


Greater Manchester News

New Story


Hospital row lands nurse a £188 bill - The Bolton News 23rd January 2007


A NURSE faces having to pay almost £200 because she left her car in a hospital visitors' space when the staff car parks were full. Sister Denise Leck says she searched in vain for a staff space at the Royal Bolton Hospital. and had no option but to park in the spaces reserved for patients and visitors.


New Story


It’s curtains for superbug in hospital’s new blitz - The Bolton News 23rd January 2007


Curtains which kill the potentially deadly MRSA bug on contact are being installed at the Royal Bolton Hospital. Bosses are spending £300,000 on the bedside curtains as part of their ongoing battle against superbugs.


Podcast


Listen to this edition of Another 15 Minutes...Health News from Fade Listen to this edition of Another 15 Minutes...Health News from Fade

Tuesday, January 23, 2007

Another 15 Minutes...Health News from Fade



Another 15 Minutes is currently experiencing navigation issues as a result of software changes, as soon as we identify a solution the navigation menu will return, we apologise for any inconvenience this causes.


Listen to this edition of Another 15 Minutes...Health News from Fade Listen to this edition of Another 15 Minutes...Health News from Fade

New Section


National News

New Story


Michael White: Tories call for halt to NHS permanent revolution - The Guardian 23rd January 2007


When David Cameron promised yesterday to "put GPs in the driving seat" of a new, kinder Conservative health policy his attack dogs simultaneously savaged the government's NHS failures. Labour duly retaliated in kind. Yet the striking thing about the rival health strategies is that the two main parties are closer on fundamentals than for years. In the search for "smaller but cleverer" public services that meet rising public expectations Mr Cameron is even addressing a Guardian conference on Friday.


Additional Story


Tories to drop NHS targets - The Independent 23rd January 2007


Additional Story


Tories pledge to ditch health targets - The Telegraph 23rd January 2007


New Story


Justine Roberts on a new baby planning service - The Guardian 23rd January 2007


If you're pregnant but too posh to shop, not to worry - help is at hand from a new service that will source the best buggy for you, decorate the nursery, and even advise on sleeping routines. For £2,500, Baby Planners promises to take care of all your pre- and post-pregnancy problems.
Well, not quite all. The swollen ankles, the cracked nipples, the birth: you'll still have to take care of those, but at least you'll not waste time fretting over whether you should get the three-in-one or the three-wheeler pushchair.


New Story


Labour accused of bias over transport plans - The Guardian 23rd January 2007


Three-quarters of the big transport projects approved in England in the last year are in Labour-held constituencies, figures released last night show, provoking Conservative charges of political bias. The Tories said the statistics showed a pattern repeated in other areas, including more help from the national lottery and extra funding for school building in Labour areas, and reports of government "heat maps" to highlight NHS cuts in marginal constituencies.


New Story


Women can worry about their weight and be intelligent too - The Guardian 23rd January 2007


The goal of physical and mental wellbeing has been recognised as a wise one since ancient times, says Liz Sheppard-Jones


New Story


Doctors angry at plan to assess patients at private clinics - The Guardian 23rd January 2007


GPs will lose the right to refer NHS patients for assessment at a hospital outpatient clinic under plans that were condemned by the British Medical Association yesterday as a step too far in the creeping privatisation of the health service. The BMA drew attention to proposals designed to cut hospital waiting lists by creating a network of private centres under contract to the government that would assess and test patients before they are allowed to get treatment as hospital outpatients. The private medical chain Netcare will set up 10 centres in Cumbria and Lancashire, where the company expects to be able to deal with 60% of patients without needing to send them for an assessment by an NHS consultant.


Additional Story


Fears over new NHS role for firms - BBC Health News 22nd January 2007


New Story


Michele Hanson on the positive effects owning a dog, and on gambling - The Guardian 23rd January 2007


I've been inconsistent, my tone of voice is wrong and my anxiety is rubbing off on the dogs


New Story


Baby died 12 hours after GP said she had a cold, inquest told - The Guardian 23rd January 2007


A three-week-old baby died 12 hours after being diagnosed with a cold at an NHS walk-in centre, an inquest heard yesterday. The parents of Shelby Whitrow were given nasal drops to help her breathe, but she was found lifeless in her bed at 7am the next day. She was rushed to Bristol Royal hospital for children but was pronounced dead 30 minutes after arriving. A postmortem was unable to pinpoint the exact cause of death but experts suspect it was a respiratory virus.


New Story


Knightley sues 'Daily Mail' for suggesting she has anorexia - The Independent 23rd January 2007


Keira Knightley, the Pirates of the Caribbean star, has launched a libel action over a newspaper story that suggested she was losing too much weight and could be anorexic. The 21-year-old actress believes the Daily Mail article suggested she had "dishonestly sought to mislead the public" over whether she has an eating disorder.


New Story


Rogue foreign doctors 'exploiting loophole to find jobs in Britain' - The Times 23rd January 2007


Rogue doctors and thousands of other health professionals who have been struck off for misconduct in other European countries are able to work in Britain because there is no mechanism in place to warn employers. In a letter to The Times today, ten leading medical regulators have expressed grave concerns about the vetting procedures.


New Story


10-minute test helps tell if your child is dyslexic - The Times 23rd January 2007


Cartoon pictures of a grey mongrel cat washing herself and a small blue alien are at the heart of a new test to help parents to establish whether their children have dyslexia. The ten-minute test, developed by speech therapists and psychologists, screens young children for language disorders from the age of 3. By testing simple grammatical and pre-reading skills, parents, teachers or assistants can check whether a child is “school-ready” or may need more help.


Additional Story


£50 test shows dyslexia risk in children - Daily Mail 22nd January 2007


New Story


NHS beats fraudsters - The Times 23rd January 2007


NHS staff with their hands in the till beware: you are being watched. Hospital Doctor (Jan 18) says that fraud committed by health professionals has fallen by 60 per cent in the past seven years.


New Story


Why some doctors are rubbish - The Times 23rd January 2007


WHAT makes doctors “go bad”? That’s the question posed by Health Service Journal (Jan 18) above a news item about research into poor performance. The research, believed to be the first of its kind, examines what makes some doctors “difficult characters”. Using interviews and psychometric data, it looks at the personalities of hospital doctors and GPs referred to the National Clinical Assessment Service, an NHS organisation that supports those whose performance raises concerns.


New Story


Agencies' job-hunting is a failure - The Times 23rd January 2007


ONE agency in three funded by the Government to help disabled people back into work has failed to find a single person a job in the open market, as opposed to jobs reserved for people with disabilities, New Start (Jan 19) reports. The Department for Work and Pensions programmes for the disabled cost £320 million in 2004-05 but the Commons Public Accounts Committee concluded that the department’s data was “patchy and inconsistent” in the main.


New Story


Baby 'with a cold' killed by virus - The Telegraph 23rd January 2007


A baby died hours after a doctor told her parents that she had a cold and would be better in 10 days, an inquest was told yesterday. Kelly and Jason Whitrow were so concerned about the condition of thier 22-day-old baby Shelby on Jan 2 last year that they twice took her to a Bristol NHS walk-in centre.


Additional Story


Doctors were 'too busy' to treat baby girl who died in her mother's arms - Daily Mail 22nd January 2007


New Story


Unruly teenagers 'are product of bad parents' - The Telegraph 23rd January 2007


Parents are to blame for crime, drug abuse and unemployment among adults by failing to raise their children properly, according to a report published today. Even middle-class families may be guilty of fuelling serious social problems later in life by sending their children to ill-equipped nurseries at a young age, says the report by the Work Foundation, an independent think-tank.


New Story


City life? It's like jet lag, say scientists - The Telegraph 23rd January 2007


City dwellers suffer a form of chronic jet lag that may make them more vulnerable to health problems, according to research. The body is ruled by a "clock" that evolved to keep our metabolism in tune with the rising and setting of the sun. But because that clock is inaccurate it needs to be reset regularly to stop it drifting out of synchronisation with the day/night cycle, as occurs with shift work and aeroplane travel across time zones.


New Story


Starving on a spoonful of mash a day - The Telegraph 23rd January 2007


The Government has admitted it is allowing elderly people to battle against starvation in care homes and hospitals, years after being alerted to the scandal by charities. Ivan Lewis, the health minister, conceded that some elderly people were given a single scoop of mashed potato or served meals with plastic cutlery "best suited to picnics".


Additional Story


Anger over elderly's 'poor food' - BBC Health News 22nd January 2007


New Story


'Lives at risk' in cancer vaccine delay - The Telegraph 23rd January 2007


The Government was accused of dragging its feet yesterday over approving a national vaccination programme against cervical cancer that could save the lives of more than 1,000 women a year. The vaccine Gardasil became available in October but is not generally obtainable on the NHS.


Additional Story


Pressure grows to give 12-year-old girls cervical cancer jab - Daily Mail 22nd January 2007


New Story


The sick league - The Telegraph 23rd January 2007


Average number of days a year taken sick in 2006


New Story


The seven-year-old girl who's beaten three cancers - Daily Mail 22nd January 2007


Her brown eyes are sparkling with life. But while seven-year-old Chloe Harrison looks a picture of health now, not long ago it was a desperately different story. She was hit by cancer three times in two years and was not expected to survive – but has astounded doctors with her fighting spirit.


New Story


'After years of ballet my hips are crumbling' - Daily Mail 22nd January 2007


Darcey Bussell, 37, began dancing at the age of five and at 20 became the youngest ever principal dancer for the Royal Ballet. She plans to retire this year in order to spend more time with her husband, City banker Angus Forbes and their children, Phoebe, five, and Zoe, two. Here she tells how 32 years of dancing have damaged her health.


New Story


Forget the gym - why a brisk walk is really the best workout - Daily Mail 22nd January 2007


This activity will melt away the pounds, tone your flabby bits and leave you on an emotional high. Yet the form of exercise destined to become the fitness trend of 2007 does not require gym membership or a personal trainer. All you need to do is walk. "Walking is a refreshing alternative to complicated aerobic routines and over-priced gym memberships," says personal trainer Lucy Knight, author of a new book on the exercise.


New Story


Dust zapper that kills hospital superbugs - Daily Mail 22nd January 2007


A dust-zapping device could hold the key to tackling the spread of bacteria and infections. The Air Ion ioniser forces tiny particles in the air to lump together, making them less likely to be inhaled, and has been used to prevent the spread of a superbug in an intensive care unit.


New Story


1,000 new cases of hospital superbug - Daily Mail 22nd January 2007


Hospitals in London are still struggling to cope with superbug infections, figures reveal today. Cases of clostridium difficile have risen by 1,000 in a year and the number of MRSA cases has only dropped slightly, despite efforts to tackle the problem.


New Story


IVF expert may be struck off for not having licence - Daily Mail 22nd January 2007


Britain's most successful fertility doctor faces being struck off and jailed. Mohamed Taranissi, 52, is being investigated for operating without a licence and is due to appear before a disciplinary hearing at the General Medical Council.


New Story


Doctors save baby whose twin sister was miscarried - Daily Mail 22nd January 2007


A baby has survived the miscarriage of his twin sister after doctors carried out a rare surgical procedure to sew him into his mother's womb. Kelly Bradburn, from Perton, West Midlands, was taken into hospital after going into an advanced stage of labour just 20 weeks into her pregnancy with twins.


New Story


Breakfast Britons go for their porridge oats - Daily Mail 22nd January 2007


Britons are turning to healthy oats in a bid to get a better start to their busy day. Heatlth conscious Brits sent sales of breakfast cereals soaring to almost £1.6 billion last year, a new report has found.


New Story


Diabetes repair 'occurs in womb' - BBC Health News 23rd January 2007


A mother's cells may try to repair the tissue damage in an unborn child that can result in type 1 diabetes, research suggests. US and UK researchers found unusually high levels of maternal DNA in children with type 1 diabetes - an indication of cell transfer from the mother.


New Story


Afghan poppies 'could help NHS' - BBC Health News 23rd January 2007


Leading doctors say Afghanistan's opium-poppy harvest should be used to tackle an NHS shortage of diamorphine. The British Medical Association says the poppy fields should be used this way, helping Afghans and NHS patients, rather than be destroyed.


New Story


Seven week wait for NHS abortion - BBC Health News 22nd January 2007


Women are having to wait up to seven weeks for an abortion, more than twice the maximum three week wait set by the government, the BBC has learned. The long waits have been linked to the current financial difficulties faced by some NHS trusts.


New Story


Young women shunning smear tests - BBC Health News 22nd January 2007


Thousands of young women are failing to have cervical smear tests, figures for England have revealed. The NHS Cancer Screening Programme says the number of women aged 25 to 29 who attended last year was down to 69%, compared to 79% 10 years ago.


New Story


Family bid to aid young addicts - BBC Health News 22nd January 2007


Alcohol and drug addiction among teenagers in Glasgow is to be treated with a new form of therapy that involves their family. A pilot project will see about 40 teenagers with addictions take part in family therapy.

New Section


International News

New Story


AstraZeneca spends more on plan to wipe out superbugs - The Guardian 23rd January 2007


AstraZeneca, the UK's second largest drug company, is to invest $100m (£50.7m) in the infectious disease area, in an attempt to find novel antibiotics to fight bacteria that are becoming resistant to drugs. The group said it would use the money to expand its research facility near Boston in the US, to accommodate up to 100 additional researchers. Some of the money will also be used on cancer research. Trevor Trust, vice president of infection research , said: "Drug resistance in bacteria continues to grow. It is a global problem."


New Story


The dilemma of a deadly disease: patients may be forcibly detained - The Guardian 23rd January 2007


Doctors fear TB strain could cause a global pandemic if it is not controlled


New Story


Vaccine on a skin patch may stave off Alzheimer's - The Guardian 23rd January 2007


A skin patch that delivers a vaccine against Alzheimer's disease could be available for high-risk patients within six years, scientists said yesterday. Successful trials in animals have raised hopes that the revolutionary treatment will keep the disease at bay in humans without triggering dangerous side-effects. Studies found a single patch dramatically slowed the build-up of toxic proteins in mouse brains for four months at a time.


Additional Story


Alzheimer's vaccine 'in a patch' - BBC Health News 23rd January 2007


New Story


Menopause at 30 for millions in poverty - The Times 23rd January 2007


Millions of women in India are going through the menopause as young as 30 because of chronic malnutrition and poverty, according to a study by a prominent Indian think-tank. The research suggests that almost one in five women in the country have gone through the menopause by the age of 41.


New Story


New Medical Research - The Times 23rd January 2007


Low-level recreational use of cocaine among pregnant mothers may leave their children with subtle but disabling brain impairments, says a study in the Journal of Neuroscience (Jan). Investigators at the Vanderbilt Kennedy Centre for Research on Human Impairment say that their laboratory experiments explain why children of such mothers may often develop a form of Attention Deficit Hyperactivity Disorder that cannot effectively be treated by Ritalin.


New Story


Coffee could hold the cure for baldness - Daily Mail 22nd January 2007


Coffee could hold the secret to curing male baldness, according to new research. Scientists have discovered caffeine stimulates the growth of tiny follicles in the scalp in men who are starting to lose their hair.


New Story


Being cynical is bad for your heart - Daily Mail 22nd January 2007


You may not be inclined to believe it - but doctors claim that being cynical is bad for your heart.
Scientists have found that those who have a natural scepticism about life have chemicals in their blood which cause inflammation.


New Story


Where to go if you want to live to be 100 - Daily Mail 21st January 2007


If you want to enjoy a long and healthy old age, here’s some bad news – you’re in the wrong country. Scientists have identified the four places in the world where many more people than usual live to be over 100, and none of them is in Britain.

New Section


Cheshire and Merseyside News

New Story


Plans revealed for second new prison on Ashworth site - Liverpool Echo 22nd January 2007


PLANS for a second new prison in the grounds of a secure hospital inMerseyside have been formally announced. An empty wing at high-security Ashworth hospital will be converted into cells for 350 men.


New Story


Mother begins damages action against hospital - Liverpool Daily Post 22nd January 2007


A MOTHER who claims she was permanently disabled after aging hospital equipment collapsed during the birth of her daughter has begun a High Court claim for hundreds of thousands of pounds in compensation. Christine Louise Morley, of Flint Drive, Neston, claims that stirrup equipment in which she was secured fell apart during the birth of hernow four-year-old daughter Rebecca in February 2002, damaging her back.


New Story


GP banned by medical council - Warrington Guardian 22nd January 2007


A WARRINGTON doctor has been banned from practice by the General Medical Council (GMC), pending the outcome of an investigation into matters relating to him. The decision means that Paul Frederick Hardcastle, who worked in otolaryngology, (ear, nose and throat), at Warrington Hospital, will remain suspended until 7 June, 2008.


New Story


Ambulance chiefs apologise for 75-minute wait - Warrington Guardian 22nd January 2007


AMBULANCE service bosses have unreservedly apologised after an 86-year-old woman was left lying in an Orford street for more than an hour. The pensioner collapsed outside her home on Capesthorn Road last week and concerned neighbours called an ambulance.


New Story


Inquest hears OAP feared he had cancer - Wirral Globe 22nd January 2007


A PENSIONER took his own life to save his wife from turmoil after hearing that he may have prostate cancer. Noel John Crossley from Valley Road, Bromborough, was found dead in his garden shed before he was diagnosed with the disease.

New Section


Cumbria and Lancashire News

New Story


Primary Care Trusts' joint statement - Lancashire Telegraph 22nd January 2007


Joint statement from Blackburn with Darwen NHS Primary Care Trust and East Lancashire NHS Primary Care Trust. The CATS consultation process commenced on 15th January and offers an opportunity for patients, the public and NHS staff to influence the shape and locations of the new service. CATS is a key element of our strategy to further reduce waiting times in the NHS as we move towards the delivery of the 18-week maximum wait in 2008.


Additional Story


Top docs in revolt over privatisation - Lancashire Telegraph 22nd January 2007


Additional Story


Doctors angry at plan to assess patients at private clinics - The Guardian 23rd January 2007


Additional Story


Fears over new NHS role for firms - BBC Health News 22nd January 2007


New Story


Maternity transfers would cost lives, MP Jamie tells Commons - Carlisle News & Star 22nd January 2007


DOWNGRADING maternity services could dramatically cut ambulance response times and ultimately put lives at risk, an MP has claimed. Copeland’s Jamie Reed believes time spent transferring mothers from Whitehaven to Carlisle will leave gaps in ambulance coverage for other emergencies.


New Story


Health chief praises council’s unitary bid - Carlisle News & Star 22nd January 2007


THE chair of the new Cumbria Primary Care Trust has praised the county council’s bid to create a single unitary authority. Maggie Chadwick took over as interim chair when the existing health trusts in the north and south of the county merged last year.

New Section


Greater Manchester News

New Story


2,000-mile dentist trip saves £8000 - Manchester Evening News 22nd January 2007


A DAD has travelled more than 2,000 miles to get his teeth fixed - despite living just yards from a dental surgery. John Thompson saved almost £8,000 by seeing a dentist in Hungary rather than one in Salford.


New Story


Battling the cold snap - Altrincham Messenger 22nd January 2007


ELDERLY homeowners in Trafford are being urged to protect themselves against severe weather conditions. By following a five-point winter checklist they can protect their homes this winter, says Age Concern Manchester

New Section


Podcast

Listen to this edition of Another 15 Minutes...Health News from Fade Listen to this edition of Another 15 Minutes...Health News from Fade

Monday, January 22, 2007

Another 15 Minutes...Health News from Fade



Another 15 Minutes is currently experiencing navigation issues as a result of software changes, as soon as we identify a solution the navigation menu will return, we apologise for any inconvenience this causes.

New Section

National News

New Story


NHS £6bn IT system poor value, say experts - The Guardian 22nd January 2007


Leading healthcare IT experts have warned that the NHS's troubled £6.2bn system upgrade is costing taxpayers substantially more than it should. They claim the same functions could be delivered for considerably less outsid e of the national programme for IT, dogged by delays and software setbacks. Stephen Critchlow, executive chairman of software group Ascribe, said he "could not see where value for money is coming from". There was evidence, he added, to suggest the NPfIT was installing and running systems for several times the going rate.


New Story


GP pay and private profit in the NHS - The Guardian 22nd January 2007


If Polly Toynbee had dug a little deeper she would have discovered some fundamental errors in her arguments against the new GP contract (GPs who can't manage themselves should be brought back into the NHS, January 19). It isn't "odd" that the BMA has submitted evidence to the doctors' independent pay review body on GP pay. It has always done so since the review body was set up. What's more, the government sends in evidence too. For the first years of the new contract the BMA submitted joint evidence with the Department of Health precisely on GP pay. This year the DoH has decided it doesn't want to, but it is wrong to say it is the BMA which has changed its mind.
Additional Story

Tories aim to scrap NHS targets - BBC Health News 21st January 2007

Additional Story

Out of control - The Sunday Telegraph 21st January 2007
Additional Story

Hewitt sparks pay row with GPs - The Guardian 20th January 2007
Additional Story

Hewitt: GP pay rise too high - The Independent 20th January 2007

Additional Story

Doctors' anger over plan to limit pay - The Times 20th January 2007

Additional Story

Hewitt: we should have capped GP salaries - The Telegraph 20th January 2007

Additional Story

Analysis - The Telegraph 20th January 2007

Additional Story

Now £100,000 GPs face pay cap after ministers' blunder - Daily Mail 19th January 2007

Additional Story

GP profit cap may be in pipeline - BBC Health News 19th January 2007


New Story


Cancer fear as fewer women take routine smear tests - The Guardian 22nd January 2007


Doctors are predicting a surge in cervical cancer rates because younger women are abandoning smear tests, a report shows today. Last year 1,300 fewer women aged 25 to 29 in England had smear tests every week than 10 years earlier. More than 30% now ignore their invitation to take part in the national screening programme.


Additional Story


Decline in smears raises risk - The Independent 22nd January 2007


Additional Story


Women at cancer risk shunning smear test - The Times 22nd January 2007


Additional Story


Women risk cancer by skipping smear test - The Telegraph 22nd January 2007


New Story

Sweet natural solution to treating disease - The Observer 21st January 2007

A spoonful of sugar may soon take the place of pills and other medicines, thanks to Leeds scientists. A team led by Professor Simon Carding has adapted a bacterium in our own bodies to make it produce substances called human growth factors which help to treat Inflammatory Bowel Disease. The bacterium has been engineered so it makes these factors only when a special type of sugar - called xylan, which is found in tree bark - is eaten. The treatment is switched off simply by stopping consumption of the sugar.

New Story

Study proves school meals help learning - The Observer 21st January 2007

Children who ate healthy school meals instead of packed lunches scored higher marks in tests, were less disruptive and concentrated longer in the classroom. A study involving thousands of pupils and hundreds of parents and schoolteachers has confirmed the theory that transforming a child's diet improves how they learn and behave.

New Story


Cameron calls for legalisation of 'medical marijuana' - The Independent 22nd January 2007


David Cameron has supported calls for cannabis to be legalised for medical use provided that clear health benefits can be shown. The Tory leader, who has refused to answer media questions about whether he used drugs before entering politics, ruled out a wider legalisation of cannabis for recreational use.


Additional Story


Cameron hint on cannabis medicine - BBC Health News 21st January 2007


New Story


Cancer scientists' gene research offers new treatment hope - The Independent 22nd January 2007


Scientists are developing a new weapon in the war on cancer by targeting the human genes that allow tumours to grow unchecked in the body. Two separate teams of researchers have found a way of switching off critical genes within a tumour cell that would otherwise stimulate the spread of the cancer. Although the research is still at an early stage, scientists are describing the approach as potentially one of the most important developments since the former US president Richard Nixon declared his "war in cancer" in 1971.


New Story


IVF doctor 'overwhelmed' by support - The Independent 22nd January 2007


A controversial fertility doctor yesterday said he felt "overwhelmed" after dozens of families gathered to back him following an official investigation and allegations in a BBC documentary over his practice. Parents and children gathered outside Mohamed Taranissi's clinic in central London to say they would not have had a family without his help.


Additional Story


Families show support for controversial fertility doctor - The Times 22nd January 2007


Additional Story


IVF doctor is the victim of a witch hunt, claim patients - The Independent on Sunday 21st January 2007


Additional Story


Parents protest at IVF doctor's 'trial by television' - The Guardian 20th January 2007



New Story

Health hijack - The Guardian 20th January 2007

Like the sorcerer's apprentice, Tony Blair's 'modernising' reforms of the NHS now threaten to lurch out of control. A brand new hospital in the New Forest, to be paid for by the NHS, is handed over to the management of a private company before it even opens: in Oxfordshire a long-standing NHS orthopaedic hospital, which has just spent millions on rebuilding work, faces the threat of closure or merger as private sector treatment centres hijack the simplest routine cases. Two Essex NHS trusts scrap plans for new hospitals because they face massive losses under the new system of payment by results: west Hertfordshire residents fight the "centralisation" of A&E services on the condemned crumbling site of Watford General, now plans for a £550m super-hospital have been binned. In Bolton 132 medical and nursing staff face the axe as a strategic health suthority opts to divert work to a private treatment centre.


New Story

Looking after Mother - The Guardian 20th January 2007

Filling in a form at the doctor's recently, I found myself answering "Yes" to the question: "Is anyone dependent on you for their care?" It was a sobering moment, a confirmation that somehow I have acquired a new role in life - principal carer for my mother, who has been diagnosed as being in the early stages of dementia. My mother is one of the growing number of vulnerable elderly who the government wants to "support" living independently in their own homes. It's also what she wants. "I'm so lucky," she says on good days. "I've got everything I want." The local social services leap on her upbeat assessment, so the support they provide, which we pay for, often requires more effort to organise than doing it yourself. The reality of "independent" living for me is that I am on call most days, responding to crises, checking she has food, calling in to give her company, collecting her medicine, and organising the so-called support.


New Story

When toys take over - The Guardian 20th January 2007

Liz Hollis's mother still fondly remembers the three toys she had as a child in the 50s. Liz herself also recalls most of her own from the 70s. But her children have so many that now even their toys have toys. Should we be concerned at such an excess?


New Story

All you need to know about strength training - The Guardian 20th January 2007

Anita Bean is a former British Bodybuilding Champion, and author of The Complete Guide To Strength Training. Select your moves There are countless strength-training moves, so which do you choose? Unless you are training for a specific sport, opt for movements that mimic the ones you use in daily life, as their benefits will carry over more. If time is limited, dispense with isolated moves and stick to multi-muscle lifts such as squats, deadlifts and bench presses.


New Story

Sarah Hooper: I've escaped the homeless trap - The Guardian 20th January 2007

I was on the homeless persons list from February 2003 until October 2006. I was living in a private rented property when the owner sold it. I had a new baby and a toddler. On benefit, it is hard to find landlords to take you on. I went to so many estate agents and they all said they didn't take DSS clients. I had to go to the council housing office for help and they put me in bed and breakfast accommodation. We were all in one room - to sleep, cook and eat - and with no cot for the baby. I didn't feel safe there - I could smell the man in the next room burning his drugs most of the night.


New Story

Jail for cheat who claimed disability benefits but took part in marathons - The Guardian 20th January 2007

A man who claimed more than £22,000 in disability benefits and told officials he could only walk using two sticks or a frame was jailed yesterday after it emerged he was a competitive marathon runner. Paul Appleby, 47, told officials that he was largely confined to a wheelchair and needed help eating and going to the toilet. But the court heard that the former miner from Kirkby in Ashfield, Nottinghamshire, was actually a club runner who regularly completed full and half marathons across the country.


New Story

Part of Ashworth special hospital will become jail to ease crisis - The Guardian 20th January 2007

A disused wing of Ashworth special psychiatric hospital on Merseyside is to undergo a £19m conversion in an attempt to cope with a renewed surge in jail numbers. Ministers have been alarmed by the fact that prison numbers have risen by more than 200 in the last week alone to reach 79,375 yesterday, with more than 400 being held every night in emergency accommodation in police cells. Earlier this week some prisoners in London were locked out of full-to-capacity prisons and police cells and had to spend the night in court cells. The provision of emergency accommodation in police cells proved insufficient even though the number of forces involved has been expanded to 35 in the past few months.


New Story

Euthanasia danger - The Guardian 20th January 2007


Peter Singer (Comment, January 17) manages to conflate a patient's reasonable refusal of treatment deemed to be burdensome with a patient's suicidal claim to be assisted (by act or omission) in ending his or her life. Singer claims that in the latter case the patient is merely seeking to escape the illness which "makes life burdensome". But to refuse treatment with the aim of ending one's life is to commit suicide: to make the ending of one's life the means of achieving one's end of being relieved of a particular condition. People in such a depressed state need palliative care and social support. They do not need to be encouraged in taking a false and negative view of the value of their lives.


New Story


How a dog's life can make you happier - The Independent 22nd January 2007


If you are looking for a healthier life, get a dog. Scientists have long believed that the companionship of a pet can be good for you, but new research suggests that dog owners are physically healthier than cat owners. According to Deborah Wells from Queen's University, Belfast, dog owners tend to have lower blood pressure and cholesterol levels, possibly thanks to regular walks with their four-legged friends.


Additional Story


Improve your health, become a dog owner - The Telegraph 22nd January 2007


Additional Story


Dog-owners 'lead healthier lives' - BBC Health News 21st January 2007


New Story

How to be happy- The Independent on Sunday 21st January 2007

As an introduction to her new column starting next week, Dr Cecilia d'Felice explains how therapy offers a proven, scientific route to feeling good about yourself.

Additional Story

Happy now? - The Independent on Sunday 21st January 2007

Additional Story

What are you optimistic about? - The Independent on Sunday 21st January 2007



New Story

New York and London reignite size-zero debate - The Independent on Sunday 21st January 2007

Britain's fashion industry will this week issue new guidelines on the use of skinny models, reigniting the debate about size zero. The British Fashion Council will tell its members they should not use models who are obviously anorexic, following hard on the heels of the Council of Fashion Designers of America, which last week issued its own guidelines.


New Story

Pasta and milk are root cause of ill health for millions - The Independent on Sunday 21st January 2007

Almost half the population is suffering from common complaints such as exhaustion, colds and migraines because of food intolerance, according to a new report published tomorrow. "Around 20 million people are suffering from symptoms that impact on their daily lives and yet they are not able to get help from the NHS," said Muriel Simmons, Allergy UK's chief executive.


Additional Story


Half of Britons suffer headaches and bloating due to food intolerance', says charity - Daily Mail 21st January 2007



New Story

After a lifetime in Broadmoor, the writer Janet Cresswell is free at last - The Independent on Sunday 21st January 2007

For the first time in more than 30 years, Janet Cresswell spent Christmas at home with her daughter, grandchildren and their pet rabbit. It was a happy occasion that many families take for granted. Not Ms Cresswell. The 75-year-old grandmother and award-winning writer had feared she would end up dying among murderers and rapists in Broadmoor, the psychiatric hospital in Berkshire where she spent a third of her life.



New Story

Mental health 'helped by birdsong' - The Independent 20th January 2007

Birdsong has a powerful healing effect which can improve mental health and benefit hospital patients, according to a health expert. Dr William Bird, GP, who is a health adviser for the countryside agency, Natural England, said tests had proven the effect. He cites a 2004 report in the prestigious medical journal, Thorax, on the effects of birdsong on patients recovering from a lung operation. "They needed less pain relief and were far more relaxed," he said.


New Story


We will scrap targets and give GPs freedom, say Tories - The Times 22nd January 2007


Most of the Government’s centralised health targets would be scrapped and family doctors given the freedom to run their own budgets and decide where their patients are treated under Conservative plans released today. Measures such as waiting times would no longer be targeted but instead the health service would be asked to focus on the outcomes it should achieve. For breast cancer, according to the Conservatives, better care would be achieved if the NHS abandoned its target of a two-month waiting time to first treatment and concentrated on improving the five-year survival rate.


Additional Story


We'll free doctors from Whitehall, say Tories - The Telegraph 22nd January 2007


Additional Story


Conservatives to scrap NHS targets - Daily Mail 21st January 2007


Additional Story


Tories aim to scrap NHS targets - BBC Health News 21st January 2007


Additional Story


Tories plan to let GPs hold the purse strings - The Sunday Telegraph 21st January 2007


New Story


NHS threatened - The Times 22nd January 2007


It is time for an honest and open discussion about what kind of National Health Service the public wants. Over the past year we have seen a dramatic acceleration of reforms to put the NHS on a market footing. This has been accompanied by actual privatisations in many areas of the health service. This process is so widespread, and has happened at such a pace that we can only conclude that there is a conscious policy to fragment the NHS and favour the private sector. As research from the Keep Our NHS Public campaign shows, the NHS is experiencing “patchwork privatisation” as sections of it are being handed to private control.


New Story


Mobile phones and microwave sickness - The Times 22nd January 2007


As your report suggests, there is indeed a significant health risk posed by devices that emit non-ionising radio-frequency radiation (“Cancer study ordered into mobile phones”, report, Jan 20).


Additional Story


Mobile risks 'need further study' - BBC Health News 20th January 2007
Additional Story

Cancer study ordered into mobile phones - The Times 20th January 2007
Additional Story

Could these be the cigarettes of the 21st century? 'Absolutely' - The Times 20th January 2007

Additional Story

We need £3m more, says phone scientists - The Telegraph 20th January 2007



New Story

NHS can’t afford Robinson reform - The Sunday Times 21st January 2007

IT WAS unfortunate that Simon Jenkins assumed that Rotherham hospital was representative of the NHS as a whole: many hospitals instituted the type of change advocated by Gerry Robinson some time ago (Brown can’t cure this paralysed NHS, so he plans to privatise it, Comment, last week). A shame too that he chose not to point out that when Robinson’s intervention resulted in an increase in patient throughput, the commissioning primary care trusts (PCTs) didn’t have the money to pay for the extra work. This is happening across the country, with clinical teams made to rein in their activity until the new financial year.


New Story

By gum, I'm full up - The Times 20th January 2007

“Hope over obesity-busting gum” was a headline that provided more to chew on than most this week. It arose because a team at Imperial College is developing a drug based on a natural gut hormone that tells the brain you are full up. The idea is to try to incorporate it into a gum that could be chewed before meals.

New Story


Website for patients to rate GPs and hospitals - The Telegraph 22nd January 2007


The Government is creating a website where the public can publish their views on hospitals and doctors. Patients will be able to "review" the performance of their GP or hospital to help others decide where they should go for treatment.


Additional Story


Rate your doctor, NHS asks patients - The Sunday Times 21st January 2007


New Story


British cancer boy needs £375,000 for pioneering US care - The Telegraph 22nd January 2007


A detective whose family has had to move from London to New York to obtain pioneering cancer treatment for her five-year-old son blamed NHS under-funding yesterday. Yvonne Brown and her husband, Richard, both former Scotland Yard officers, have been living with their children in one room in Manhattan since Dec 1 while their youngest child, Jack, receives treatment at the Memorial Sloan-Kettering Center.


New Story


How have we fallen so far behind in battle to beat MRSA? - The Telegraph 22nd January 2007


As a new and deadly strain of the superbug is identified, Victoria Lambert examines Britain's track record All across Europe, virulent bacteria are on the march, constantly mutating to resist the means that we invent to destroy them. Ironically, the better we get at creating antibiotic drugs that can wipe them out, the more inventive and resistant the bacteria must become to survive and multiply.


Additional Story


The battle of the bugs: is it over? - The Telegraph 21st January 2007


New Story


Care home elderly go hungry, says minister - The Telegraph 22nd January 2007


Pensioners are being left hungry and undernourished in care homes and hospitals, a Government minister has admitted. Ivan Lewis, the parliamentary under secretary of state for care services, said some elderly people were given only "a single scoop of mashed potato" for lunch while others were forced to eat with plastic cutlery.


Additional Story


Starving of the elderly - Daily Mail 21st January 2007



New Story

Anorexia: a mother reflects - The Sunday Telegraph 21st January 2007

Your 14-year-old daughter weighs 5st and refuses to eat. What do you do? In despair, Harriet Brown and her husband turned to a controversial treatment in which parents take the place of doctor and nurse. Here she describes how, in one year, they coaxed Kitty back to health


New Story

It's a perfectly healthy system, minister, that you plan to make worse - The Sunday Telegraph 21st January 2007

Regrettably nowadays, whenever a minister threatens a "radical overhaul" of some long-established policy, it is inevitably for the worse. And so it will be with prescription charges: not perhaps the most thrilling of subjects, but important and difficult to balance – not penalising the sick while discouraging excess prescribing. The present system has worked pretty well for 50 years, with generous exemptions for the young and old and those on low incomes, and a ceiling of £100 per year (the cost of a pre-payment certificate that covers all prescription charges for 12 months) for those who do pay. And, importantly, it is easy to administer. Not so the various "options" recently outlined by the minister of state, Lord Warner. These include a lower flat rate but no exemptions, or basing exemptions solely on income (that will require all to be means-tested). The logistics of both are daunting.


New Story

Nish Joshi's Q&A - The Sunday Telegraph 21st January 2007

Over the past three years I have developed rosacea on both cheeks, with redness and visible capillaries. At times it seems to fade, but then it reappears. I eat a balanced diet, I take multivitamins and I am not constipated. I eat spicy food about every ten days. I have been using metronidazole cream and although it has been suggested that long-term antibiotics might help, I'd really prefer a holistic approach.


New Story

Private firms 'to get £23 billion from NHS' - The Telegraph 20th January 2007

The private sector will pocket at least £23 billion of NHS money in profits and interest over 30 years, according to figures published today. The Private Finance Initiative hospital building scheme offers big rewards for the private sector, according to calculations made by the Keep Our NHS Public campaign.

Additional Story

PFI firms 'make £23bn NHS profit' - BBC Health News 20th January 2007


New Story

Blair said hospital 'would not close' - The Telegraph 20th January 2007

A hospital looks doomed despite a pre-election promise from the Prime Minister that there was "no question" of it being shut down. A review of health services in Teesside has recommended that two hospitals in Hartlepool and Stockton should be replaced with a single "super-hospital".


New Story


Cut-price breast implants to combat cowboy clinics - Daily Mail 22nd January 2007


Leading plastic surgeons have joined together to offer breast implant surgery at a cut price to spare women from potentially dangerous cheap clinics. The complete Mybreast package costs £4,250 – up to £3,000 less than in some London clinics – with a lifetime follow-up.


New Story


Teenage pregnancy myth dismissed - BBC Health News 22nd January 2007


The perception that teenage girls with unwanted pregnancies have been less careful about contraception than older women has been dismissed by a study.



New Story

Vitamin pill for prostate cancer - BBC Health News 20th January 2007

Scientists have developed a vitamin D pill to treat advanced prostate cancer. Exposure to Vitamin D from sunlight is known to improve the prognosis of certain cancers.


New Story

'Community superbug tests' needed - BBC Health News 19th January 2007

Rapid tests for deadly superbugs that are spreading in the community are urgently needed, an expert is warning. Professor Richard James of the Centre for Healthcare Associated Infections at Nottingham University says Britain is vulnerable to the types of MRSA.


New Story

Folic acid boosts elderly brains - BBC Health News 19th January 2007

Folic acid supplements can improve the memory and brain power of ageing brains, research shows. Men and women aged 50 to 70 who took daily supplements had similar mental abilities to contemporaries almost five years younger, The Lancet study found.

New Section

International News


New Story

No way to treat an Aids hero - The Guardian 20th January 2007

If you think the nutritionists and vitamin peddlers in the UK are weird, you really want to go to South Africa, where President Thabo Mbeki has a long history of siding with the HIV denialists, who believe that HIV does not cause Aids (but that treatments for it do), and where his health minister talks up fruit and vegetables as a treatment, as we have previously covered here. In this world, which is not as remote as you might think from where you're sat, Zackie Achmat is a hero: the founder of the Treatment Action Campaign in South Africa, he recently won a breakthrough in his long battle against the vitamin-loving Aids denialists of Mbeki's government, to make HIV medication available through the public health system.


New Story

Health scares - The Guardian 20th January 2007

This Christmas, Tala was given a Barbie microphone set. The present has proved useful, helping her sing along to her favourite pop star, Haifa; her little sister, Maya, received a doll that makes baby noises. No sooner had Christmas finished than Eid arrived. But the mood in Lebanon was hardly joyous this holiday season: the gruelling summer war has offset a fragile political balance, with protesters squatting in downtown Beirut demanding the fall of the current government.


New Story

Trans fats 'raise infertility risk' - The Independent 20th January 2007

Eating more unhealthy trans fats could make it harder for women to get pregnant, according to new US research. Scientists found that for every 2 per cent increase in the amount of calories a woman got from trans fats instead of carbohydrates, her risk of infertility increased by 73 per cent.

Additional Story

Chips 'can increase the risk of infertility' - The Telegraph 20th January 2007

Additional Story

Food fats threaten women's fertility - Daily Mail 19th January 2007



New Story

Low-drug IVF reduces health risks - The Sunday Telegraph 21st January 2007

Women who undergo conventional IVF produce significantly higher numbers of abnormal embryos than those using a more "natural" version, research has found. The results suggest that a regime using fewer fertility drugs could increase the chances of taking home a baby and reduce health risks for the mother. They come amid mounting concern that some treatments may be doing more harm than good.


New Story

Brain cancers shrink in drug test - BBC Health News 21st January 2007

A treatment to starve brain tumours of blood has shown positive results in clinical trials. However, US doctors say it is not yet clear whether the drug, AZD2171, will extend the lives of patients with some of the deadliest cancers.



New Story

Scientists unravel superbug that kills in 24 hours - Daily Mail 19th January 2007

Scientists have unlocked the secrets of a deadly superbug that attacks healthy young people and can kill within 24 hours. The news is a vital first step in attempts to find a cure for the virulent disease, PVL-MRSA, that is highly resistant to current antibiotic treatments.

New Story


'Altruistic' brain region found - BBC Health News 22nd January 2007


Scientists say they have found the part of the brain that predicts whether a person will be selfish or an altruist. Altruism - the tendency to help others without obvious benefit to oneself - appears to be linked to an area called the posterior superior temporal sulcus.


New Story


Defence cell genetics unscrambled - BBC Health News 22nd January 2007


The genetic make-up of key immune system cells has been unravelled by researchers, offering clues to diseases such as rheumatoid arthritis. Scientists at two US centres scanned the genome of T-cells - a vital part of the body's defences against infection.


New Section

Cheshire and Merseyside News

New Story

The Phil Monty - Liverpool Echo 19th January 2007

A MERSEYSIDE man who survived testicular cancer is stripping off to raise awareness of the disease. Phil Morris, from Oxton, will be showing his wares to the world when he poses nude in a national magazine.


New Story

Boy dies following dental operation - Chester Chronicle 19th January 2007

THE Countess of Chester Hospital says a dental operation under-gone by a youngster who later died was carried out by an outside organisation. Jamie Evans, 10, was rushed to Alder Hey's Children's Hospital in Liverpool after dental treatment at the Countess but died last Tuesday.


New Story

Concern mounts over GP service - Midweek Visiter 17th January 2007

MP John Pugh has demanded a full log of complaints about Southport and Formby’s GP out-of-hours call handling service amid fears over patient safety. Mr Pugh met with health chiefs at Sefton PCT on Friday following numerous complaints about Urgent Care 24 (UC24), which took over the service last November.


New Story

Part of Ashworth special hospital will become jail to ease crisis - The Guardian 20th January 2007

A disused wing of Ashworth special psychiatric hospital on Merseyside is to undergo a £19m conversion in an attempt to cope with a renewed surge in jail numbers. Ministers have been alarmed by the fact that prison numbers have risen by more than 200 in the last week alone to reach 79,375 yesterday, with more than 400 being held every night in emergency accommodation in police cells. Earlier this week some prisoners in London were locked out of full-to-capacity prisons and police cells and had to spend the night in court cells. The provision of emergency accommodation in police cells proved insufficient even though the number of forces involved has been expanded to 35 in the past few months.


New Section

Cumbria and Lancashire News

New Story

My reaction was one of disbelief. I thought only old people had strokes - Carlisle News & Star 20th January 2007

A WEBSITE has been set up by West Cumbrian stroke victims to warn of the tell-tale signs of a stroke. Strokelink West Cumbria, a support group started by High Harrington couple John and Alison Hunter, along with others affected by the condition, wants to dispel the idea that strokes only happen to the elderly.


New Story

Private clinics threat to new hospital bid - Carlisle News & Star 20th January 2007

PLANS to build a new hospital in west Cumbria will be threatened by the proposed introduction of privately-run treatment centres, it is claimed. The controversial CATS centres, which aim to reduce waiting lists, are currently planned for Workington, Carlisle and Ulverston.

Additional Story


Have your say on NHS proposals - Blackpool Citizen 19th January December 2007


New Story

Patients, doctors and public asked to join health debate - Carlisle News & Star 20th January 2007

DOCTORS and patients are to have more say about the way health services are run in their community. That was the promise made this week by the new Cumbria Primary Care Trust (PCT).


New Story

MP’s fury as respite care plans revealed - Carlisle News & Star 20th January 2007

CARLISLE MP Eric Martlew has condemned the new Cumbria Primary Care Trust (PCT) over plans to close two respite care centres for disabled children. Bosses announced this week that they want to close Orton Lea in Carlisle and Seacroft at St Bees, which both provide overnight respite care.


New Story

Doc’s last chat with hospital death patient - Carlisle News & Star 20th January 2007

A HEALTHCARE assistant from Whitehaven’s West Cumberland Hospital told a jury of her last conversation with psychiatric patient Peter Weighman after he took an overdose. Susan Wright was giving evidence yesterday in the trial of unregistered psychiatrist Peter Fisher, 46, who denies manslaughter through gross negligence.


New Story

Smoking ban to come in at Turf Moor - Lancashire Telegraph 20th January 2007

SMOKING will be banned from Turf Moor from July. Smokers will not be able to light up in any part of the Burnley FC ground, including the executive suites and boardroom. Accrington Stanley is also planning to introduce a ban, although the club said it was trying to find an small area where fans could still have a cigarette.


New Story

Doc ‘sex assault’ jury fails to reach verdict - Lancashire Telegraph 20th January 2007

THE jury in the case of a doctor accused of sexually assaulting a 16 year-old girl has been discharged after failing to reach a verdict. Judge Edward Slinger took the decision yesterday afternoon in the case of Doctor Naveen Shivan, who worked at Blackburn Royal Infirmary.


New Story

Gambling 'epidemic' warning from BMA - Blackpool Citizen 19th January December 2007

Gambling can lead to depression and alcoholism, according to a new report published by the British Medical Association (BMA) this week. It comes a fortnight before Blackpool finds out if it has been selected to have the country's first regional casino.


New Story

‘Help to save lives' is mum's plea - Lancashire Telegraph 19th January 2007

THE mother of a 16-year-old who died from leukaemia has urged East Lancashire residents to pledge their organs to save lives. Christopher Smith developed acute lymphoblastic leukaemia in November and died five weeks later on Christmas Eve.


New Story

Hospitals pay system review call - Lancashire Telegraph 19th January 2007

NEW rules on how hospitals are paid do not do enough to improve quality of care for patients, East Lancashire health bosses have said. They said paying hospitals for the number of operations they carry out was "limited" as it did not measure how well the operation was carried out.

New Section

Greater Manchester News

New Story

Hospital is to be put in picture - The Bolton News 20th January 2007

PHOTOGRAPHERS are being offered the chance to display their work in a gallery with a difference - a restaurant wall at Fairfield Hospital in Bury. The Broadoak restaurant is being refurbished and will feature a ten-metre long photograph.


New Story

Viruses come under the spotlight - Altrincham Messenger 20th January 2007

A HALE virologist is taking to the airwaves to raise awareness of a little known virus and the potentially devastating effects it can have for children. Twenty-eight-year-old Julia Duffey has been invited to take the reins on the Radio Five Live Matthew Bannister show as a citizen journalist on Thursday.


New Story

Mental health staff to strike over job cuts - Manchester Evening News 19th Jnuary 2007

MEDICAL staff have voted to strike over plans which they say will `devastate' Manchester's mental health care and put patients and the public in danger. Community nurses, occupational therapists and administration staff voted overwhelmingly for a walkout over proposals to cut 33 community nurses and eight occupational therapists from the Manchester Mental Health and Social Care trust, while increasing the number of managers and social workers.


New Story

Mental health team are so caring - The Bolton News 19th January 2007

WHILE it seems to be the "in thing" to criticise social care and other services, I am writing to congratulate several agencies in Bolton for all they have done for my mother during the past three years. Since she developed Alzheimer's and required help in her own home initially and then later in residential and nursing care, I have nothing but praise for everyone involved in her care. The advice and help we received, I believe, was second to none. It would be difficult to single out individuals, but I would like to express my appreciation to the social worker who first assessed my mother's needs and the speedy way in which community services were provided. My mother's neighbours were also caring as they "looked out" for her and contacted us when they had concerns.


New Story

Service was there for my baby - Altrincham Messenger 19th January 2007

MY EIGHT-month-old baby became ill a couple of weeks ago, I rang the on call' doctor to be told that he was very busy and due to her high temperature he suggested I attend A&E at Trafford General Hospital. To be honest, I thought they would think I was wasting their time but from entering the department I was treated as a high priority and was totally put at ease as they treated my baby. The staff on this ward were extremely professional. The paediatrician I saw was so friendly, she was brilliant with my baby and explained about her illness and the treatment. Not once was I made to feel like a timewaster, in fact they treated us with a matter of urgency.


Podcast

Listen to this edition of Another 15 Minutes...Health News from Fade Listen to Monday's edition of Another 15 Minutes...Health News from Fade
Listen to this edition of Another 15 Minutes...Health News from Fade Listen to Sunday's edition of Another 15 Minutes...Health News from Fade
Listen to this edition of Another 15 Minutes...Health News from Fade Listen to Saturday's edition of Another 15 Minutes...Health News from Fade

Sunday, January 21, 2007

Another 15 Minutes...Health News from Fade



Another 15 Minutes is currently experiencing navigation issues as a result of software changes, as soon as we identify a solution the navigation menu will return, we apologise for any inconvenience this causes.


Listen to this edition of Another 15 Minutes...Health News from Fade Listen to Sunday's edition of Another 15 Minutes...Health News from Fade

New Section


National News

New Story


Sweet natural solution to treating disease - The Observer 21st January 2007


A spoonful of sugar may soon take the place of pills and other medicines, thanks to Leeds scientists. A team led by Professor Simon Carding has adapted a bacterium in our own bodies to make it produce substances called human growth factors which help to treat Inflammatory Bowel Disease. The bacterium has been engineered so it makes these factors only when a special type of sugar - called xylan, which is found in tree bark - is eaten. The treatment is switched off simply by stopping consumption of the sugar.


New Story


Study proves school meals help learning - The Observer 21st January 2007


Children who ate healthy school meals instead of packed lunches scored higher marks in tests, were less disruptive and concentrated longer in the classroom. A study involving thousands of pupils and hundreds of parents and schoolteachers has confirmed the theory that transforming a child's diet improves how they learn and behave.


New Story


How to be happy- The Independent on Sunday 21st January 2007


As an introduction to her new column starting next week, Dr Cecilia d'Felice explains how therapy offers a proven, scientific route to feeling good about yourself.


Additional Story


Happy now? - The Independent on Sunday 21st January 2007


Additional Story


What are you optimistic about? - The Independent on Sunday 21st January 2007




New Story


New York and London reignite size-zero debate - The Independent on Sunday 21st January 2007


Britain's fashion industry will this week issue new guidelines on the use of skinny models, reigniting the debate about size zero. The British Fashion Council will tell its members they should not use models who are obviously anorexic, following hard on the heels of the Council of Fashion Designers of America, which last week issued its own guidelines.


New Story


Pasta and milk are root cause of ill health for millions - The Independent on Sunday 21st January 2007


Almost half the population is suffering from common complaints such as exhaustion, colds and migraines because of food intolerance, according to a new report published tomorrow. "Around 20 million people are suffering from symptoms that impact on their daily lives and yet they are not able to get help from the NHS," said Muriel Simmons, Allergy UK's chief executive.


New Story


IVF doctor is the victim of a witch hunt, claim patients - The Independent on Sunday 21st January 2007


Scores of IVF parents will take to the streets today demonstrating in support of the controversial fertility doctor Mohamed Taranissi. Regarded as "the baby god" by many of his patients, Dr Taranissi found himself at the centre of a media furore last week after a clinic run by him was accused in a Panorama documentary of offering healthy women IVF. He is now being investigated by health watchdogs.


New Story


After a lifetime in Broadmoor, the writer Janet Cresswell is free at last - The Independent on Sunday 21st January 2007


For the first time in more than 30 years, Janet Cresswell spent Christmas at home with her daughter, grandchildren and their pet rabbit. It was a happy occasion that many families take for granted. Not Ms Cresswell. The 75-year-old grandmother and award-winning writer had feared she would end up dying among murderers and rapists in Broadmoor, the psychiatric hospital in Berkshire where she spent a third of her life.


New Story


Rate your doctor, NHS asks patients - The Sunday Times 21st January 2007


PATIENTS are to be given the chance to write restaurant-style reviews of doctors and hospitals on a website being set up by the government. They will be able to post online praise or complaints about the quality of service and the standard of the premises. Had to wait ages for your liver transplant to arrive? Was your GP surly in serving up your diagnosis? Patients will be able to vent their criticisms as consumers frequently do for hotels and restaurants and for products sold on Amazon.


New Story


NHS can’t afford Robinson reform - The Sunday Times 21st January 2007


IT WAS unfortunate that Simon Jenkins assumed that Rotherham hospital was representative of the NHS as a whole: many hospitals instituted the type of change advocated by Gerry Robinson some time ago (Brown can’t cure this paralysed NHS, so he plans to privatise it, Comment, last week). A shame too that he chose not to point out that when Robinson’s intervention resulted in an increase in patient throughput, the commissioning primary care trusts (PCTs) didn’t have the money to pay for the extra work. This is happening across the country, with clinical teams made to rein in their activity until the new financial year.


New Story


Anorexia: a mother reflects - The Sunday Telegraph 21st January 2007


Your 14-year-old daughter weighs 5st and refuses to eat. What do you do? In despair, Harriet Brown and her husband turned to a controversial treatment in which parents take the place of doctor and nurse. Here she describes how, in one year, they coaxed Kitty back to health


New Story


It's a perfectly healthy system, minister, that you plan to make worse - The Sunday Telegraph 21st January 2007


Regrettably nowadays, whenever a minister threatens a "radical overhaul" of some long-established policy, it is inevitably for the worse. And so it will be with prescription charges: not perhaps the most thrilling of subjects, but important and difficult to balance – not penalising the sick while discouraging excess prescribing. The present system has worked pretty well for 50 years, with generous exemptions for the young and old and those on low incomes, and a ceiling of £100 per year (the cost of a pre-payment certificate that covers all prescription charges for 12 months) for those who do pay. And, importantly, it is easy to administer. Not so the various "options" recently outlined by the minister of state, Lord Warner. These include a lower flat rate but no exemptions, or basing exemptions solely on income (that will require all to be means-tested). The logistics of both are daunting.


New Story


Tories plan to let GPs hold the purse strings - The Sunday Telegraph 21st January 2007


Family doctors would set their own targets, run their own budget and decide where their patients are treated under radical health plans to be unveiled by the Tories this week. The Conservatives will propose putting all GPs in control of their budgets, allowing them to make savings and to reinvest money in health care as they see fit.


Additional Story


Tories aim to scrap NHS targets - BBC Health News 21st January 2007


Additional Story


Out of control - The Sunday Telegraph 21st January 2007


New Story


The battle of the bugs: is it over? - The Telegraph 21st January 2007


In the past few days, new drugs and air filters have been announced that can defeat MRSA and other superbugs. So has science finally won the long war with our deadliest enemy? Two years ago, Stuart Maskery, an amateur rugby player and a successful businessman, was an imposing and proud figure. Today, he is a frail shadow of his former self, unable to walk without the aid of a stick, too weak to lift a bag of shopping and racked by constant pain.


New Story


Nish Joshi's Q&A - The Sunday Telegraph 21st January 2007


Over the past three years I have developed rosacea on both cheeks, with redness and visible capillaries. At times it seems to fade, but then it reappears. I eat a balanced diet, I take multivitamins and I am not constipated. I eat spicy food about every ten days. I have been using metronidazole cream and although it has been suggested that long-term antibiotics might help, I'd really prefer a holistic approach.


New Story


Dog-owners 'lead healthier lives' - BBC Health News 21st January 2007


If you want to live a healthier life get a dog, research suggests. The companionship offered by many pets is thought to be good for you, but the benefits of owning a dog outstrip those of cat owners, the study says.


New Story


Mobile risks 'need further study' - BBC Health News 20th January 2007


A radiation expert is calling for more research into the long-term health effects of using mobile phones. Lawrence Challis, chairman of the Mobile Telecommunications Health Research Programme (MTHR), said it was "responsible" to study long-term users.

New Section


International News

New Story


Low-drug IVF reduces health risks - The Sunday Telegraph 21st January 2007


Women who undergo conventional IVF produce significantly higher numbers of abnormal embryos than those using a more "natural" version, research has found. The results suggest that a regime using fewer fertility drugs could increase the chances of taking home a baby and reduce health risks for the mother. They come amid mounting concern that some treatments may be doing more harm than good.


New Story


Brain cancers shrink in drug test - BBC Health News 21st January 2007


A treatment to starve brain tumours of blood has shown positive results in clinical trials. However, US doctors say it is not yet clear whether the drug, AZD2171, will extend the lives of patients with some of the deadliest cancers.

New Section


Cumbria and Lancashire News

New Story


My reaction was one of disbelief. I thought only old people had strokes - Carlisle News & Star 20th January 2007


A WEBSITE has been set up by West Cumbrian stroke victims to warn of the tell-tale signs of a stroke. Strokelink West Cumbria, a support group started by High Harrington couple John and Alison Hunter, along with others affected by the condition, wants to dispel the idea that strokes only happen to the elderly.


New Story


Private clinics threat to new hospital bid - Carlisle News & Star 20th January 2007


PLANS to build a new hospital in west Cumbria will be threatened by the proposed introduction of privately-run treatment centres, it is claimed. The controversial CATS centres, which aim to reduce waiting lists, are currently planned for Workington, Carlisle and Ulverston.


New Story


Patients, doctors and public asked to join health debate - Carlisle News & Star 20th January 2007


DOCTORS and patients are to have more say about the way health services are run in their community. That was the promise made this week by the new Cumbria Primary Care Trust (PCT).


New Story


MP’s fury as respite care plans revealed - Carlisle News & Star 20th January 2007


CARLISLE MP Eric Martlew has condemned the new Cumbria Primary Care Trust (PCT) over plans to close two respite care centres for disabled children. Bosses announced this week that they want to close Orton Lea in Carlisle and Seacroft at St Bees, which both provide overnight respite care.


New Story


Doc’s last chat with hospital death patient - Carlisle News & Star 20th January 2007


A HEALTHCARE assistant from Whitehaven’s West Cumberland Hospital told a jury of her last conversation with psychiatric patient Peter Weighman after he took an overdose. Susan Wright was giving evidence yesterday in the trial of unregistered psychiatrist Peter Fisher, 46, who denies manslaughter through gross negligence.


New Story


Smoking ban to come in at Turf Moor - Lancashire Telegraph 20th January 2007


SMOKING will be banned from Turf Moor from July. Smokers will not be able to light up in any part of the Burnley FC ground, including the executive suites and boardroom. Accrington Stanley is also planning to introduce a ban, although the club said it was trying to find an small area where fans could still have a cigarette.


New Story


Doc ‘sex assault’ jury fails to reach verdict - Lancashire Telegraph 20th January 2007


THE jury in the case of a doctor accused of sexually assaulting a 16 year-old girl has been discharged after failing to reach a verdict. Judge Edward Slinger took the decision yesterday afternoon in the case of Doctor Naveen Shivan, who worked at Blackburn Royal Infirmary.

New Section


Greater Manchester News

New Story


Hospital is to be put in picture - The Bolton News 20th January 2007


PHOTOGRAPHERS are being offered the chance to display their work in a gallery with a difference - a restaurant wall at Fairfield Hospital in Bury. The Broadoak restaurant is being refurbished and will feature a ten-metre long photograph.


New Story


Viruses come under the spotlight - Altrincham Messenger 20th January 2007


A HALE virologist is taking to the airwaves to raise awareness of a little known virus and the potentially devastating effects it can have for children. Twenty-eight-year-old Julia Duffey has been invited to take the reins on the Radio Five Live Matthew Bannister show as a citizen journalist on Thursday.

New Section


Podcast


Listen to this edition of Another 15 Minutes...Health News from Fade Listen to Sunday's edition of Another 15 Minutes...Health News from Fade

Friday, January 19, 2007

Another 15 Minutes...Health News from Fade



Another 15 Minutes is currently experiencing navigation issues as a result of software changes, as soon as we identify a solution the navigation menu will return, we apologise for any inconvenience this causes.


Listen to this edition of Another 15 Minutes...Health News from Fade Listen to this edition of Another 15 Minutes...Health News from Fade

New Section


National News

New Story


GPs who can't manage themselves should be brought back into the NHS - The Guardian 19th January 2007


What is a GP worth? There is no answer in this gold-rush decade when the government shies away from even thinking about worth. The public sector is nailed to 1.5% pay increases, boardrooms soar by 30% and the Pay Commission is rowing about whether to defy the Confederation of British Industry and raise the minimum wage a measly 25p. No wonder this year's GP negotiations have run into the mud, suspended in anger. In a value void, how should we think about GPs earning an average £106,000, and many a lot more? Are they worth it? That's roughly the same as a director of social services running a whole county's complex children's services, including all schools, children in care and children's health. But that director is a hated "bureaucrat": just see the bloggers' bile when I described their jobs this week.


Additional Story


GP pay 'should have been capped' - BBC Health News 19th January 2007


New Story


Gambling entices our young and vulnerable. They need our help - The Guardian 19th January 2007


Your article on the gambling addiction report I authored for the British Medical Association stated that "problem gambling is associated with a number of health problems" (Compulsive gamblers should be treated on NHS, say doctors, January 16). Your report, though, did not have room to detail why these health problems occur. Problem gamblers ultimately find themselves in a desperate situation both financially and psychologically. This intense stress can often lead to adverse health consequences including anxiety disorders, depression, insomnia, intestinal disorders and migraines - genuine medical problems that need treating.


New Story


Maternity care row over hospital closures in Blair's back yard - The Guardian 19th January 2007


Two big NHS hospitals serving Tony Blair's constituents in south Durham are to be closed after a fierce row over which of them should provide maternity services, it emerged last night. Patricia Hewitt, the health secretary, has approved proposals to close the hospitals in Stockton and Hartlepool and build a new state-of-the-art facility for nearly 500,000 people living north of the Tees. The hospitals have a combined turnover of about £186m this year.


New Story


Sanitation rated the greatest medical advance in 150 years - The Guardian 19th January 2007


Sanitation is the greatest medical milestone of the last century and a half, acccording to a poll carried out by the British Medical Journal. Sanitation was the clear winner among 15 milestones shortlisted by readers of the journal, including the development of vaccines, which has safeguarded many children's lives, and the invention of the contraceptive pill, which was a contributory factor to significant social change.


Additional Story


A sewer is the best medicine, poll declares - The Times 19th January 2007


Additional Story


Sanitation 'best medical advance' - BBC Health News 18th January 2007


New Story


Transfusion led to vCJD - The Independent 19th January 2007


A patient has been diagnosed with variant-Creutzfeldt-Jakob disease nine years after receiving an infected blood transfusion. The Health Protection Agency (HPA) said it was the fourth case of vCJD to be diagnosed in Britain in connection with a blood transfusion. The patient has not been identified.


Additional Story


Infected patient in vCJD scare - The Times 19th January 2007


New Story


Tories plan strict quotas for makers of fatty foods - The Times 19th January 2007


Food and drink manufacturers could be given strict quotas for producing fatty and sugary foods and alcohol under plans to tackle obesity and excessive drinking being considered by the Conservative Party. Under the plan drawn up by the Working Group on Responsible Business, set up by David Cameron last July, producers would be allocated production limits allowing them to produce a certain quantity of fatty food or alcoholic drink.


New Story


IVF trial by TV - The Times 19th January 2007


On January 15 the BBC broadcast an edition of Panorama focusing on the IVF clinics operated by Mohammed Taranissi. In the programme it was revealed that his clinics were under investigation by the Human Fertilisation and Embryology Authority (HFEA), which obtained a warrant to search his premises with police assistance. This programme raises important issues relevant to the regulation of independent professional practice.


New Story


Radiation dose 60 per cent too high - The Telegraph 19th January 2007


Lisa Norris is just one of the many patients who have died after being given the wrong treatment. The teenager had 19 radiotherapy sessions at the Beatson Oncology Centre in Glasgow to treat a brain tumour.


New Story


Ban on home HIV tests 'outdated' - BBC Health News 19th January 2007


Banning home HIV testing kits is unwarranted and a breach of patient autonomy, a UK health expert argues. The tests were made illegal in 1992 amid the concern, among others, that a person could discover they had HIV without ready access to counselling.


New Story


Brits buying more fruit and veg - BBC Health News 18th January 2007


Brits are buying record amounts of fruit and veg - the biggest increase for 20 years - a survey finds. Household expenditure rose by 12.9% for fruit and 6.3% for veg and fell for confectionary, soft drinks and alcohol.


New Story


Vegetative state drug review call - BBC Health News 18th January 2007


The husband of a woman in a persistent vegetative state who was given an experimental treatment has said she would not have wanted the drug. A court ruled the 53-year old woman should be given sleeping pill zolpidem - against her family's wishes.

New Section


International News

New Story


Folic acid boosts minds of over-50s, study finds - The Guardian 19th January 2007


Absent-mindedness in the over-50s is significantly improved when people take folic acid supplements, according to a large study reported in today's Lancet. Short-term memory, mental agility and verbal fluency tests were all better among people who took high doses of the supplement for three years, compared with a group given a placebo. The Food Standards Agency said it would consider the new evidence as part of its ongoing consultation on the widespread addition of folic acid in flour. Only women planning to conceive are currently advised to take folic acid, to decrease the chances of their baby being born with a neural tube defect, such as spina bifida.


Additional Story


Folic acid sets back effects of ageing on the brain by five years, says study - The Independent 19th January 2007


Additional Story


Folic acid pills 'can slow mental decline' - The Times 19th January 2007


New Story


Bacteria tests reveal how MRSA strain can kill in 24 hours - The Guardian 19th January 2007


Scientists have unravelled the workings of a deadly superbug that attacks healthy young people and can kill within 24 hours. PVL-producing MRSA, a highly-virulent strain of the drug-resistant superbug, methicillin-resistant staphylococcus aureus, has spread around the world and caused deaths in the UK, Europe, the US and Australia. PVL or panton-valentine leukocidin toxin destroys white blood cells and usually causes boils and other skin complaints. But if it infects open wounds it can cause necrotising pneumonia, a disease that rapidly destroys lung tissue and is lethal in 75% of cases.


Additional Story


MRSA could kill healthy youngsters - The Telegraph 19th January 2007


New Story


Huge cut in measles deaths hailed as triumph - The Guardian 19th January 2007


Measles deaths have been slashed by more than half by a concerted campaign that was hailed yesterday as a triumph for global public health and could pave the way for eradication of one of the world's most infectious diseases. Between 1999 and 2005, there was a 60% reduction in annual measles deaths worldwide, from 873,000 to 345,000, according to United Nations figures reported in the medical journal the Lancet. Africa, where children are most prone to die when they catch measles because of poor nutrition and other infections including HIV, has led the way, with a 75% drop in deaths. In 1999, 506,000 African children died - 90% aged under five. By 2005, the figure had fallen to 126,000.


Additional Story

>
Anti-measles campaign saves seven million lives - The Independent 19th January 2007


Additional Story


Vaccine drive cuts measles deaths - BBC Health News 19th January 2007

New Section


Cheshire and Merseyside News

New Story


City centre children are living below the breadline - Daily Post 18th January 2007


HALF of all children living in and around Liverpool city centre are living in poverty, a study revealed yesterday. Youngsters in Liverpool’s Riverside ward are the second most underprivileged in the country with 49.7% living under the poverty level – double the national average.


New Story


Poor health blamed on poverty - Runcorn Weekly News 18th January 2007


THE high level of strokes and heart attacks in Halton has been blamed on deprivation and widespread poverty throughout the borough. Residents in Runcorn and Widnes are some of the unhealthiest in England and Wales, with people living in the poorest parts of the borough lucky to live to be 74 -- five years less than the combined national average for men and women.


New Story


Pensioner with broken leg was 'slung' into bath - Runcorn Weekly News 18th January 2007


A NURSE dumped a frail, elderly woman in a bath when she could see the patient was in agony from a suspected fractured leg, a disciplinary hearing has been told. Valerie Humphreys, 58, told two care assistants: 'You might as well give her a bath now you're here' before putting her in the tub herself.


New Story


Finger on the pulse of healthy eating - Midweek Advertiser 17th January 2007


FINGERPRINT scanners are being used to monitor children’s eating habits at a West Lancashire school. St Teresa’s RC, in College Road, Up Holland, is one of the first primaries in Lancashire to install scanners in its canteen.


New Story


Student midwives show vision in award success - Midweek Advertiser 17th January 2007


STUDENT midwives from Edge Hill University, Ormskirk, won a prestigious award presented by the Princess Royal. The Student Vision Award was presented to Michelle Cash and Liza Munro at the Royal College of Midwives annual awards event.


New Story


Hospital car pass cost will stay at £5 a week - Midweek Advertiser 17th January 2007


THE weekly car park pass at Ormskirk Hospital will not now increase to £7.50 but will remain at £5, the hospital has confirmed. Together with a £5 refundable deposit, it means anyone visiting the hospital more than once in the same week will save money by using the pass once car-park charges rise to £3 per visit from January 8.


New Story


Doctor is banned for investigation - Warrington Guardian 18th January 2007


A WARRINGTON doctor has been banned from practice by the General Medical Council (GMC), pending the outcome of an investigation into matters relating to him. The decision means that Paul Frederick Hardcastle, who worked in otolaryngology (head and neck disorders), will remain suspended until June 7, 2008.

New Section


Cumbria and Lancashire News

New Story


Community treatment survey - Midweek Advertiser 17th January 2007


A PUBLIC consultation on moving health services from hospitals to community clinics is underway until the end of March. Lancashire County Council want to ensure people have their say on major changes being planned to NHS services as part of an Government shake up called Clinical, Assessment, Treatment and Support Services (CATS).


Additional Story


‘Patients will be top priority’ - Carlisle News & Star 18th January 2007


New Story


Death case psychiatrist was cover for staff - Carlisle News & Star 18th January 2007


AN unregistered psychiatrist accused of manslaughter provided overnight cover at a Cumbrian hospital while there were staff shortages there. Peter Fisher was put on the on-call rota at the West Cumberland Hospital even though he could not prescribe drugs for patients.


New Story


Patient told nurse of 'sexual assault' - Lancashire Telegraph 18th January 2007


A NURSE burst into tears as she described how a teenage patient told her she had been touched intimately by a doctor. Naveen Shivan, who is an ENT doctor in the former Blackburn Royal Infirmary, is on trial at Preston Crown Court after denying sexual assault.

New Section


Greater Manchester News

New Story


'Hundreds of jobs at risk' in latest NHS shake-up - Manchester Evening News 18th January 2007


REGIONAL health bosses are putting hundreds of jobs at risk by transferring routine testing out of the NHS to a private company, according to hospital chiefs. NHS North West, which is in charge of health care in the region, is in talks with two companies to set up six new centres across Greater Manchester.


New Story


Have your say on future of hospital - The Bolton News 18th January 2007


TIME is running out for the people of Bolton to have their say on the future of the Royal Bolton Hospital. Residents are being asked for their opinions on its possible transformation into a Foundation Trust.


New Story


Disabled cobbler fights hospital shoe decision - The Bolton News 18th January 2007


A SPECIALIST shoe-maker has criticised the Royal Bolton Hospital for not giving disabled people a choice of footwear supplier. Phil Taylor, who wears the kind of surgical shoes he also makes, supplied shoes to the hospital until recently.


New Story


Winter warning for the elderly - Bury Times 18th January 2007


AGE Concern Bury has issued a winter checklist as the borough braces itself for gale force winds and snow in the coming weeks. The organisation is encouraging older home owners to minimise the risks of burst pipes and other cold weather-related problems.


New Story


Roy gets MBE as reward for services to NHS - Bury Times 18th January 2007


A BURY Primary Care Trust employee has spoken of his delight at being awarded an MBE for his services to the NHS. Roy Dudley-Southern is the collaborative commissioning team leader and strategic planning manager for Greater Manchester in a career that has spanned almost four decades.


New Story


Baby unit fight goes to the top - Bury Times 18th January 2007


HEALTH Secretary Patricia Hewitt is to be asked to review the controversial decision to axe Fairfield Hospital's maternity department and special care baby unit. Bury councillors are referring the matter to the Secretary of State because they disagree with the Making it Better decision to to close the services at Fairfield as part of a massive shake-up of maternity services across Greater Manchester.


New Story


Health trust wants your opinion - Bury Times 18th January 2007


THE health trust providing mental care services at Fairfield Hospital is inviting Bury residents to attend a meeting discussing the future of healthcare. Pennine Care NHS Trust is planning on becoming a Foundation Trust which will allow people to become "members" of the trust and be consulted on plans for future developments.


New Story


Surgery team wins award for excellence - Bury Times 18th January 2007


THE Woodbank Surgery has won a GP Award of Excellence for effectively involving patients in changes to the surgery over the last 18 months. Health Secretary Patricia Hewitt presented the award to Dr Vijay Kumar, GP partner, and Maria Stacy, the practice manager at the NHS Alliance conference in Bournemouth.

New Section


Podcast


Listen to this edition of Another 15 Minutes...Health News from Fade Listen to this edition of Another 15 Minutes...Health News from Fade

Thursday, January 18, 2007

Another 15 Minutes...Health News from Fade



Another 15 Minutes is currently experiencing navigation issues as a result of software changes, as soon as we identify a solution the navigation menu will return, we apologise for any inconvenience this causes.


Listen to this edition of Another 15 Minutes...Health News from Fade Listen to this edition of Another 15 Minutes...Health News from Fade

New Section


National News

New Story


Michael Cross: Joined-up government is not inevitable or desirable - The Guardian 18th January 2007


Sometimes you have to feel sorry for the government. As one set of civil servants, the Home Office, is fed into the mincer for failing to join up its databases, another, the Cabinet Office, gets a roasting for proposing too much synchronicity. However, for all the furore generated by tinfoil-hatted state-haters, Technology Guardian readers will find little new in the prime minister's announcement of plans to join up government IT systems. After all, the current plan for "transformational government" was published in November 2005. In August we revealed that ministers had agreed in principle to remove one big barrier to a single government database, the presumption that data given to one public agency would not be given to another.


New Story


Electrosmog in the clear with scientists - The Guardian 18th January 2007


Studies show that it's not mobile phones and electric fields making people ill - so what is the cause of 'electrosensitivity'?


New Story


Fighting cancer with a cold - The Guardian 19th January 2007


British scientists are preparing to launch trials of a radical way to fight cancer, which kills tumours by infecting them with viruses like the common cold. If successful, virus therapy could eventually form a third pillar alongside radiotherapy and chemotherapy in the standard arsenal against cancer, while avoiding some of the debilitating side-effects.


New Story


Desperate for a baby - The Guardian 19th January 2007


Mohammed Taranissi is Britain's most controversial doctor. He is the object, in equal measure, of much gratitude and much suspicion. He is also, according to the Sunday Times Rich List, the UK's richest doctor, with a personal fortune of $75m. Forget cancer or heart disease or other big killers, medical fame and fortune in the 21st century comes from making babies. And Taranissi's Assisted Reproduction and Gynaecology Centre has secured thousands of these little bundles of joy for desperate parents.


New Story


A&E targets missed because of bed shortages - The Independent 18th January 2007


Doctors are struggling to meet government accident and emergency waiting time targets because of a shortage of beds, doctors' leaders warned. In a survey for the British Medical Association (BMA), 87 per cent of doctors questioned said the lack of in-patient beds was the main reason for not meeting targets. The Government target is that 98 per cent of patients should wait no more than four hours from arrival at A&E to admission, transfer or discharge.


Additional Story


A&E success 'not sustainable' - BBC Health News 17th January 2007


New Story


Winner may lose leg after falling ill in the Caribbean - The Independent 18th January 2007


The film director Michael Winner was seriously ill in hospital yesterday with a mysterious complaint that may require his infected left leg to be amputated. Doctors said Winner, 71, who fell ill while on holiday in Barbados, was making "good progress" after he was admitted to intensive care in the private London Clinic on Harley Street.


New Story


I bet I know why the BMA is banging on about that - The Times 18th January 2007


When it comes to self-advancement, there is no interest group that comes close to the British Medical Association. When trade union officials speak, we know what they are up to. They are trying to increase their influence and power. And we judge the sense of what they say accordingly. The BMA is, except in one crucial respect, no different. It is like any other trade union, with the same overriding motivation: to increase its influence and power. The crucial difference, however, is that when the prefix “Doctor” is attached to a name, we lose our critical faculties. We assume that anything emanating from the BMA is disinterested and motivated only by the desire to increase the sum of human good.


New Story


Patients given botched surgery at NHS-funded private clinics - The Times 18th January 2007


Patients underwent an unknown number of botched, cancelled or mismanaged operations by private clinics that are paid to carry out surgery for the NHS, according to a leaked report commissioned by the Government. The report, by the Healthcare Commission, says that patient safety may have been compromised and throws into doubt the quality of treatment at independent sector treatment centres, which are privately run but funded with public money.


New Story


British woman orders 'off-the-shelf' designer baby - Daily Mail 17th January 2007


A woman is to be impregnated with Britain’s first off-the-shelf designer baby within weeks, it has been revealed. The Londoner and her partner are preparing to fly to a clinic in America to begin the controversial fertility treatment.


New Story


Vitality Diet: Your questions answered - Daily Mail 17th January 2007


I'm a student and so on a tight budget. How can I adapt the vitality diet as fish is quite expensive! Alie, Leeds Jane says: On the cost front, frozen fish can be just as healthy as fresh and is much cheaper – so check this out.


New Story


Picture that saved baby Jasmin's sight - Daily Mail 17th January 2007


When Jasmin Nethercoat had her photograph taken on her first birthday, little did her parents realise the picture would save her sight. Her mother Vicki had the photograph developed - only to notice a strange spot reflected in her daughter's left eye.


New Story


Edwardians were the first obese Britons - Daily Mail 17th January 2007


We are a generation of over-fed gluttons, gorging on our abundance like never before. Or that, at least, is what the experts will have us believe. But a new TV documentary sets out to smash the myth that the current obesity epidemic is a modern disease - and questions advice that we should look to the past for a healthier diet.


New Story


Bingeing youth of educated women - BBC Health News 18th January 2007


Educated women are far more likely to binge-drink in their 20s than those with few qualifications, a study shows. The Institute of Child Health examined the drinking habits of thousands of British women born in 1958.


New Story


Downsizing survivors 'depressed' - BBC Health News 18th January 2007


Workers who keep their jobs following cuts are almost as likely to need treatment for stress as colleagues made redundant, say researchers. University College London researchers, writing in the Journal of Epidemiology and Community Health, said more help should be offered to "survivors".


New Story


Crystal meth made class A drug - BBC Health News 17th January 2007


The "euphoric" sex and dance culture drug crystal meth will become a class A drug to avert widespread use in the UK. People who use methamphetamine - its proper name - now face up to seven years in jail and an unlimited fine, while dealers could be jailed for life.


New Story


Man jailed for giving woman HIV - BBC Health News 17th January 2007


A 35-year-old man has been jailed for three-and-a-half years for infecting his girlfriend with HIV. The pair met at a Bournemouth nightclub and had unprotected sex during their relationship even though the victim had been concerned the man had the virus.


New Story


Colgate warned over '80%' boast - BBC Health News 17th January 2007


The maker of Colgate toothpaste has been warned not to repeat its famous advertising claim that "more than 80% of dentists recommend Colgate". The Advertising Standards Authority concluded the claim on Colgate posters was "misleading" after investigating the phone survey behind the boast.


New Story


Drug death doctor not registered - BBC Health News 16th January 2007


A psychiatrist accused of the manslaughter of a suicidal patient was not registered, a court has heard. Peter Fisher, 46, is accused of killing Peter Weighman, 39, who died from a drugs overdose at West Cumberland Infirmary in September 2002.

New Section


International News

New Story


Why are French women so fertile? - The Guardian 18th January 2007


Bonne question. Perhaps because, unlike their European counterparts, they can have it all and reach the almost perfect balance between work, life and sex. The National Institute of Demographic Studies announced yesterday that French women top the European league of fecundity with an average of two children each, compared with a European average of 1.5. The French now have more babies than the Irish and, for the first time since 1974, the renewal of the generations in France is about to be guaranteed.


New Story


Scientists reveal how world's worst flu killed victims - The Guardian 18th January 2007


The victims of the deadliest flu pandemic in history were killed when their bodies unleashed an uncontrolled immune reaction as a protective mechanism, say scientists. Patients' lungs rapidly became inflamed and filled with blood and other fluids which eventually drowned them.


Additional Story


Lethal secrets of 1918 flu virus - BBC Health News 18th January 2007


New Story


Parasites 'may help MS patients' - BBC Health News 17th January 2007


Having millions of parasites living in your gut may actually be a benefit if you also have multiple sclerosis, a study has found. The methods used by the creatures to stop our immune systems wiping them out could be keeping the illness at bay.


New Story


US doctors plan womb transplant - BBC Health News 17th January 2007


A team of doctors in New York say they are planning to perform the first womb transplant in the US. The procedure would potentially allow women who have had their wombs damaged or removed to develop a pregnancy and give birth.

New Section


Cheshire and Merseyside News

New Story


Bid to ban booze from all of Wirral's streets -Liverpool Daily Post 17th January 2007


ALL of Wirral’s streets and open areas could be declared an alcohol- free zone under plans being considered by the local authority. As the number of areas being “designated” gathers pace Wirral’s councillors have been asked to look at options to enlarge the plans to cover the entire borough.


Additional Story


Court bans off-licence from selling alcohol for one month - Liverpool Daily Post 17th January 2007


Additional Story


'Binge drink' row as shop can open to 4am - Liverpool Echo 17th January 2007


New Story


New Ashworth plans set for approval - Liverpool Echo 17th January 2007


PLANS for the first of two new prisons proposed for Ashworth Hospital are set to be approved today – despite concerns it will lead to increased crime. Sefton Council’s planning committee is being asked to back the plans for the Category B establishment.


New Story


Husband of MRSA victim slams care - The Crewe Chronicle 17th January 2007


A DISTRAUGHT husband has hit out at conditions at Crewe's Leighton Hospital after the death of his wife who was suffering from the 'superbug' MRSA and from CJD. Spina bifida sufferer Elizabeth Roberts, 46, died on January 7. Her condition deteriorated after a fall in Leighton which had followed injections to increase her stability.


New Story


Clinical waste site scheme sparks health fears - The Crewe Chronicle 17th January 2007


FURIOUS residents are fighting plans to site a depot dealing with clinical waste, including human tissue and blood, near their homes. Crewe and Nantwich mayor Howard Curran has spoken of his'deepconcern' overthebidto create a major transfer station backing on to homes in Crewe.

New Section


Cumbria and Lancashire News

New Story


'Left to die by doctor' - Carlisle News & Star 17th January 2007


A MENTAL health patient died because the doctor treating him at a Cumbrian hospital didn’t know what he was doing, a court heard. Peter Weighman, 39, died on September 23, 2002, after taking an overdose of 50 co-praxamol tablets on the Yewdale ward at Whitehaven’s West Cumberland Hospital.


Additional Story


Tragedy doctor 'not on register' - Liverpool Echo 17th January 2007


Additional Story


Drug death doctor not registered - BBC Health News 16th January 2007


New Story


Action to tackle teen pregnancy hotspot - Lancashire Telegraph 17th Janury 2007


HYNDBURN is still a hot spot' for teenage pregnancy, despite a drop in the number of young girls becoming mothers before they reach 18. Figures reveal the number of girls who fall pregnant while under 18 has fallen by 16.8 per cent over seven years.

New Section


Greater Manchester News

New Story


Meningitis blunder doc escapes punishment - Manchester Evening News 17th January 2007


A GP found guilty of misconduct for failing to carry out basic checks on a toddler who later died of meningitis will not face any punishment. Dr Ramesh Gulati, of Shiv Lodge Medical Centre, in Longsight, made "a number of failings of sufficient gravity" to affect his registration in his care of two-year-old Wesley Hayward, a medical watchdog decided.


Additional Story


Doctor who missed meningitis found guilty - Manchester Evening News 16th January 2007


New Story


Woman died after breast operation - The Bolton News 17th Janury 2007


THE son of a woman who died of septicaemia after a mastectomy operation said he was shocked when she became so ill so quickly, an inquest heard. Theresa Dickinson, aged 78, of Brownfield Crescent, Little Hulton, died at the Royal Bolton Hospital on July 24, 2006, just days after she had her left breast removed after cancer was discovered.


New Story


Army workout - The Bolton News 17th Janury 2007


I KNOW a thing or two about army fitness training. After all, I recently bought - and watched - the whole of the Second World War drama series, Band of Brothers.


New Story


Royal Bolton appoints new training boss - The Bolton News 17th Janury 2007


THE Royal Bolton Hospital has appointed a new director of medical education. Dr Malcolm Brown completed his medical training in 1981, and in 1985 began as a registrar in the Unsworth Group Practice in Westhoughton, where he is now a partner.


New Story


School’s strange fruit - The Bolton News 17th Janury 2007


ART is being used as the latest weapon against childhood obesity. Pupils at Harper Green High School have been creating their own fruit and vegetables in a bid to encourage other youngsters to eat their five a day.


New Story


Hospital is great place to work, say our nurses - The Bolton News 17th Janury 2007


THE Royal Bolton Hospital has been voted one of the best health organisations to work for in the whole country. The Nursing Times has ranked the hospital in its top 100 following a survey of nurses.


New Story


New health boss for town - The Bolton News 17th Janury 2007


Roger Pegum has been appointed as a non-executive director for Bury Primary Care Trust. Mr Pegum is the principal lecturer in accounting and finance at Liverpool John Moores University and served as a non-executive director of the Heywood and Middleton PCT before its merger with Rochdale PCT.

New Section


Podcast


Listen to this edition of Another 15 Minutes...Health News from Fade Listen to this edition of Another 15 Minutes...Health News from Fade

Wednesday, January 17, 2007

Another 15 Minutes...Health News from Fade



Another 15 Minutes is currently experiencing navigation issues as a result of software changes, as soon as we identify a solution the navigation menu will return, we apologise for any inconvenience this causes.

New Section


National News

New Story


Catalogue of abuse in NHS care homes - The Guardian 17th January 2007


The NHS faces being stripped of its responsibility for learning disability services after inspectors today issue the second damning report in six months into the care of some of the most vulnerable members of society. People with learning disabilities had been subjected to physical and sexual abuse at a hospital in London, according to an investigation by the Healthcare Commission. One member of staff was jailed for six years last summer after being charged with rape of a woman resident who was considered unable to give consent due to her low mental age. A second staff member had been given a suspended sentence for a sex offence against the same woman a year earlier.


Additional Story


Bleak house - The Guardian 17th January 2007


Additional Story


Physical and sex abuse exposed in care homes - The Independent 17th January
2007


Additional Story


Sex attacks and abuse at care homes - The Telegraph 17th January 2007


Additional Story


Crisis in care - The Telegraph 17th January 2007


Additional Story


Learning disability care slammed - BBC Health News 17th January 2007


New Story


Invest in our ears - The Guardian 17th January 2007


The bareness of the waiting room at my local audiology clinic says it all. After a busy morning - it is now noon - there are just two people waiting. A television apparently tuned into a children's programme is high on the wall but the picture is blurred and the sound barely audible. Good job there are no children about. I am there to arrange my graduation from analogue aids, which I have been using in both ears for six years, to digital. I was hardly in a state of feverish excitement but ready to move to better hearing. Four years ago, when I was writing a book on hearing loss, NHS officials told me that digital hearing aids would be available "to all who need them" by 2005.


Additional Story


Still waiting to hear - The Guardian 17th January 2007


New Story


Housing that will make you feel good - The Guardian 17th January 2007


The psycho-geography of housing is hardwired into us at an early age. As a paperboy, I delivered my bundles of Mirrors and Suns to an area of town characterised in the main by two types of residence: solid, handsome, stone-built Victorian millworkers' terrace cottages; and, further up the hill, plain rows of modern, brick, low-rise corporation flats and maisonettes. It was impossible to say why, but in the early morning gloom I always felt comfortable around the terraced streets, whereas I would approach the council blocks with curious trepidation. Same people, same choice of newspaper: but somehow you felt you were crossing an invisible borderline to a different, unsettling place.


New Story


Can anything stop the superbug? - The Guardian 17th January 2007


MRSA is already notorious for killing the elderly and frail. But now a new form of the 'hospital superbug' is spreading through our parks and playgrounds. You can catch it with a single scratch, and the drugs that used to hold out some hope are rapidly becoming useless.


New Story


Existing drug will cure hospital superbug MRSA, say scientists - The Guardian 17th January 2007


Scientists believe they have found a cure for the MRSA superbug after unearthing an existing drug on a computer database. The discovery means patients could be routinely treated within two or three years, since the drug is known to be safe and is already used on the NHS in the treatment of acute illness.


Additional Story


British scientists find 'superbug cure' - Daily Mail 16th January 2007


Additional Story


MRSA: the right approach? - The Times 17th January 2007


New Story


More than half of the world's people will soon live in cities - The Guardian 17th January 2007


More than half of the world's people will soon live in cities. David Satterthwaite asks whether aid agencies and governments are ready for the social and environmental implications of the urban phenomenon


New Story


Historic changes - The Guardian 17th January 2007


Charting the past life of care home residents with Alzheimer's can transform occupational therapy


New Story


Mediocre no more - The Guardian 17th January 2007


A choice-led NHS has the capability to create patient entrepreneurs who, instead of being passive receivers of care, can shape health services around their needs


New Story


Interview: New Philanthropy Capital's head of research, Martin Brookes - The Guardian 17th January 2007


Why should we donate to charities that can't prove they are any good? New Philanthropy Capital's head of research tells Patrick Butler that he has no qualms about taking on some of the biggest names in the sector


New Story


How the Westers won - The Guardian 17th January 2007


Fed up with the media's view of their community as a hub for drug use, crime and antisocial behaviour, the residents of one of Britain's most notorious housing estates decided to fight back.


New Story


Mental health services fail our young people, says Barbara Herts - The Guardian 17th January 2007


Despite huge investment in child and youth mental health services over the past five years - with some £67m in the last financial year alone - many young people in mental distress continue to be admitted to adult psychiatric wards for treatment.


Additional Story


Children 'abused' on adult psychiatric wards - The Telegraph 17th January 2007


New Story


Bill of no rights for young offenders - The Guardian 17th January 2007


They are the group most likely to reoffend, suffer mental health problems, or commit suicide, yet according to campaign groups, the lot of young adults aged 18-21 in the prison system is about to get even worse.


New Story


The test-tube baby lottery: it could be you - The Times 17th January 2007


The charity Infertility Network UK was due to spend yesterday compiling a report for the Department of Health into the inconsistent availability of in vitro fertilisation (IVF) treatment on the NHS. Instead, it spent the day handling a torrent of calls from worried patients who had seen a BBC Panorama programme questioning the propriety of the man said to be the most successful IVF technician in Britain, the private practitioner Mohammed Taranissi.


New Story


Consultant attacks neglect on wards - The Telegraph 17th January 2007


A senior doctor claims that patients are at risk on hospital wards after watching elderly relatives develop "needless" and "distressing" complications. Dr Katherine Teale, a consultant anaesthetist at Hope Hospital, Salford, spoke out after two family members developed bed sores and a third lost six per cent of body weight following prolonged nausea. Her experiences do not relate to the hospital where she works.


New Story


Fertility watchdog accused of 'playing to cameras' - Daily Mail 16th January 2007


The fertility regulator today denied "playing to the cameras" after it announced it had obtained warrants to inspect two clinics just as a television documentary was about to be screened about them.The Human Fertilisation and Embryology Authority (HFEA) revealed last night that it had obtained a court warrant earlier in the day to inspect the two London clinics run by leading IVF doctor Mohamed Taranissi.


Additional Story


IVF watchdog 'played to cameras' - BBC Health News 16th January 2007


New Story


Climate change is making hayfever season arrive early - Daily Mail 16th January 2007


Hayfever sufferers could begin feeling symptoms within weeks, experts have warned. They also predicted that climate change could soon mean year-round misery for people who are allergic to pollen.


New Story


Saved by the Dracula drug - Daily Mail 16th January 2007


Over 30,000 in Britain have Barrett's oesophagus, a condition that can be a precursor to stomach cancer. Conventional treatment - to remove the oesophagus and relocate the stomach - carries a high risk of serious complications. But a new form of laser therapy kills the diseased tissue without the need for surgery.


New Story


You are what you buy! - Daily Mail 16th January 2007


All your best intentions of switching to a healthier diet will be wasted if you don't know how to shop for one - and it's not as simple as it might seem. Changing your diet for the better - cutting out junk food, processed meals and sweet, fatty snacks and introducing a wide variety of new foods - means changing habits of a life-time.


New Story


Could explosives be the cure for poor circulation? - Daily Mail 16th January 2007


Painful, swollen fingers and toes may be a thing of the past for the millions of sufferers of Raynaud's disease, thanks to a new treatment which uses a form of explosive.


New Story


Doctors knew I had MS for 11 years before they told me - Daily Mail 16th January 2007


A father's 11-year nightmare struggle to be diagnosed with MS has exposed the scandal of how consultants withhold bad news


New Story


Call for painkiller ban 'rethink' - BBC Health News 17th January 2007


Two Labour MPs are calling for the Department of Health to reconsider the ban on the painkiller co-proxamol. Anne Begg, MP for Aberdeen South, and former GP Dr Howard Stoate, the MP for Dartford, will raise the issue at a House of Commons debate.


New Story


Gullet cancer 'might be blocked' - BBC Health News 17th January 2007


Scientists believe blocking the action of vitamin A may help prevent a type of cancer of the gullet. There has been an eight-fold rise in cases of oesophageal adenocarcinoma in the UK in the last 30 years.


New Story


Campaign to prevent Ashley case - BBC Health News 17th January 2007


A British disability charity is trying to ensure that an "Ashley X case" could not happen to a child in the UK. Ashley is the American child who has been medically "frozen in time" to stop her body developing to adult size.


New Story


Weaknesses in razor killer's care - BBC Health News 16th January 2007


Weaknesses existed in the treatment of a schizophrenic who killed two friends, an independent inquiry has found. Sean Crone, 26, of Sunderland, stabbed 25-year-old Ian Lawson 24 times and slashed the throat of Simon Richardson, 27, in October 2003.


New Story


Tories make £500m malaria pledge - BBC Health News 16th January 2007


The Conservatives have pledged to spend £500m a year of the UK's foreign aid on tackling malaria in sub-Saharan Africa. Shadow chancellor George Osborne said the funding would continue until a UN target of reducing the incidence of the killer disease was met.


New Story


Transplant brother is to be donor - BBC Health News 16th January 2007


The last of four siblings who all have a rare genetic disorder is to have a lifesaving bone marrow transplant - thanks to his brother. The Hartleys from Romsey have X-linked Lymphoproliferative Syndrome (XLP), with sufferers not expected to live into their teens without a transplant.


New Story


'Pay for surgery' option dropped - BBC Health News 16th January 2007


Plans to offer NHS patients the option of paying for their surgery to avoid waiting lists have been abandoned. Chief executive of Northampton General Hospital, Andrew Riley, has withdrawn a letter sent on 8 January which outlined new plans for minor surgery.


New Story


Health chiefs block asthma drug - BBC Health News 16th January 2007


Asthma campaigners have condemned a decision not to approve a new drug for use by the NHS in Scotland as "unjust and inhumane". The Scottish Medicines Consortium (SMC) said the economic case for prescribing Xolair had not been made.

New Section


International News

New Story


Is tomato and broccoli a good combination? - The Guardian 17th January 2007


If you want to avoid cancer, it might be. Tales of the miraculous cancer-busting properties of lycopene, the red pigment found in tomatoes and peppers, have been around for years. Recent research from the University of Illinois, however, has found that pairing it with the glucosinolates in broccoli makes it even more effective in controlling tumour growth in lab rats. While this is good news for rodents, isn't the pairing of sweet, acid tomatoes with shy, delicate broccoli a difficult trick to pull off? Texturally, the combination of slimy, pulpy tomato and fibrous, woody broccoli sounds like a match made in hell. Or is it?


New Story


A dubious distinction - The Guardian 17th January 2007


People are allowed to refuse medical treatment, yet doctors still cannot assist a patient's death


New Story


Algae gel to combat HIV infection - BBC Health News 16th January 2007


A type of algae found on the Brazilian coast could hold the key to a powerful new protection for women against HIV. Brazilian researchers have developed a microbe-killing gel from the algae which they hope will be used to block HIV infection.


New Story


Rescued Katrina embryo baby born - BBC Health News 16th January 2007


A US woman whose frozen embryos were rescued from a flooded fertility clinic weeks after Hurricane Katrina battered New Orleans has given birth to a boy. Noah Markham was born 0723 local time (1323 GMT). His mother Rebekah, 32, said she chose the name "because God put it on his heart to build an ark".

New Section


Cheshire and Merseyside News

New Story


Care nurse in misconduct inquiry over bath incident - Warrington Guardian 16th January 2007


A NURSE dumped a frail, elderly woman in a bath when she could see the patient was in agony from a suspected fracture, a disciplinary hearing was told last week. Valerie Humphreys, aged 58, from Warrington, told two care assistants you might as well give her a bath now you're here' before putting her in the tub herself.


New Story


Hospital duo prepare for trip of a lifetime - Wirral Globe 16th January 2007


TWO staff from Arrowe Park Hospital's Ophthalmology Department are shoring up their sea legs for an unforgettable jungle experience. Optometrist Jasleen Jolly and her colleague Joan Hughes, a senior specialist nurse, are travelling to Peru in April to provide much-needed healthcare to people in the country's remote Amazon villages.

New Section


Cumbria and Lancashire News

New Story


Plans for Private Clinics Debated - Carlisle News & Star 16th January 2007


PLANS to set up contro versial private clinics to perform NHS work in Workington and Carlisle have today gone out to public consultation. The so-called CATS cen tres – Clinical Assessment, Treat and Support – will carry out routine diagnosis and treatment on behalf of the NHS.


Additional Story


Private firms to help NHS - Lancashire Telegraph 16th January 2007


Additional Story


Have your say on medical centres - Chorley Citizen 16th January 2007


New Story


Charity status bid by carers support group - Carlisle News & Star 16th January 2007


A PENRITH man who runs a support group for carers across Britain is trying to attain charitable status for his organisation. Clive Arnold, 48, set up UK Carers in mid-2005 and has so far received almost a million hits on the group’s website.


New Story


Local Labour MPs join NHS cuts campaigns - Carlisle News & Star 16th January 2007


LABOUR MPs in Cumbria have been joining senior colleagues to campaign against NHS cuts and closures in their own constituencies. Nationally it has emerged that at least 13 members of Tony Blair’s senior government have joined protests in their local areas.


New Story


Bosses are urged to protect staff health - Carlisle News & Star 16th January 2007


CUMBRIAN bosses are being encouraged to introduce new strategies to protect the health of their workforce. The regional campaign follows news that there are 400,000 people in the north west alone claiming incapacity benefit, while 5.2 million working days were lost last year due to sickness.


New Story


Hospital TV solution near - Lancashire Telegraph 16th January 2007


A GOVERNMENT investigation blamed for delays in installing bedside televisions and phones at Blackburn's new super hospital is nearing completion, the Department of Health has said. As revealed in yesterday's Lancashire Telegraph the £113m Royal Blackburn Hospital still does not have the systems six months after opening.


New Story


Doctor's sexual assault trial opens - Lancashire Telegraph 16th January 2007


A DOCTOR today went on trial accused of sexually assaulting a 16-year-old girl in her hospital bed. Dr Naveen Shivan, of the ENT unit at the former Blackburn Royal Infimary, is accused of sexually assaulting the girl in August 2005.

New Section


Greater Manchester News

New Story


Hospital to cut 95 more jobs - The Bolton News 16th January 2007


MORE jobs are to be axed at The Royal Bolton Hospital. Just days after it was announced up to 130 posts could be made redundant as a result of privatisation of some outpatient tests, bosses at the cash-strapped hospital have confirmed a further 95 jobs could go.


New Story


Bolton must brush up on oral hygiene - The Bolton News 16th January 2007


YOUNGSTERS in Bolton's poorest areas have at least four teeth which are missing or rotting. That is the finding of a study carried out in 98 primary schools from January to July, 2006.


New Story


Artist’s book to help new mums - The Bolton News 16th January 2007


HELP is at hand for breastfeeding mums in Bury. Cash from the National Lottery will see £5,575 invested in an art group for mothers who are breastfeeding their babies.


New Story


Man's hospital death linked to drugs probe - Leigh Journal 16th January 2007


Detectives in Wigan are investigating the death of a man from Scholes after being alerted by hospital staff. Police were called to Wigan Royal Infirmary at 8pm last night following reports of the suspicious death of a 47-year-old man.

New Section


Podcast


Listen to this edition of Another 15 Minutes...Health News from Fade Listen to this edition of Another 15 Minutes...Health News from Fade

Tuesday, January 16, 2007

Another 15 Minutes...Health News from Fade



Another 15 Minutes is currently experiencing navigation issues as a result of software changes, as soon as we identify a solution the navigation menu will return, we apologise for any inconvenience this causes.

Listen to this edition of Another 15 Minutes...Health News from Fade Listen to this edition of Another 15 Minutes...Health News from Fade

New Section


National News

New Story


IVF clinics forced to open files - The Guardian 16th January 2007


The fertility industry regulator yesterday took the unprecedented step of obtaining a warrant to inspect the records of Britain's most successful IVF clinic on the day a TV programme questioned its methods. Police officers accompanied officials from the Human Fertilisation and Embryology Authority (HFEA) to two London clinics run by Mohamed Taranissi. One of his clinics, the Assisted Reproduction and Gynaecology Centre, has the highest success record in the country, with a 59% pregnancy rate among women under 35.


Additional Story


Police raid clinics of top IVF doctor amid claims that he acted illegally - The Times 16th January 2007


Additional Story


My IVF and the clinic from hell - The Independent 16th January 2007


Additional Story


Top IVF doctor's clinics inspected - The Independent 16th January 2007

New Story


Tories pledge $1bn a year to wipe out malaria - The Guardian 16th January 2007


The Conservatives will today make their first significant pitch on international aid by unveiling plans to spend $1bn (£510m) a year on malaria treatment until the disease is eradicated worldwide.

New Story


Diary - The Guardian 16th January 2007


Popular Pat Hewitt's canny plan to "rationalise" NHS services by pulling the plug on assorted A&E, maternity and children's departments at hospitals across the land continues, we're delighted to see, to enjoy widespread support among her government colleagues. Following Saturday's disgraceful report in this very newspaper that no fewer than 13 members of Mr Tony's ministerial team were now fighting planned closures in their constituencies, the office of one of them - immigration under-sec Joan Ryan - emails to intimate that the article failed fully to express the measure of her indignation at an "unreliable, discredited and utterly flawed" plan, while someone else helpfully informs us of two further high-ranking home office rebels: PPS Siobhan McDonagh, and police minister Tony McNulty. We are, obviously, devastated.

New Story


Why can't I sleep? - The Guardian 16th January 2007


It's 3am and you're wide awake. At least you can be reassured that, like you, millions of other people are lying in bed, staring into the dark. A study by the Sleep Centre in Edinburgh says January is the most sleepless month of the year. The same research has named 3am as Anxiety Hour, when up to 8.5 million adults are regularly jolted awake. Worries over money (particularly after an expensive Christmas), family and work are the insomniac's favourite mental torture topics.

New Story


Gaming addicts 'need treatment on NHS' - The Times 16th January 2007


Gambling should be recognised as a form of addiction and treatment for it provided by the NHS, doctors’ leaders said in a report published yesterday. Britain faces a surge in gambling as opportunities to place bets increase, the British Medical Association cautioned. The Gambling Act will come into force in September, at a time when online gambling is expanding fast.


Additional Story


Doctors warn of a Britain lost amid the throes of its addiction to gambling - The Telegraph 16th January 2007


Additional Story


Call for better NHS gambling help - BBC Health News 15th January 2007

New Story


Aspirin 'may halt asthma' - The Times 16th January 2007


Men who take a low dose of aspirin to protect against heart disease may also reduce the risk of adult-onset asthma.

New Story


Fast-track cures for ill nurses - The Times 16th January 2007


WITH sickness rates in public services 40 per cent higher than in the private sector, the Government is determined to bring them down. But how? Nursing Standard (Jan 10) says that nurses could soon be fast-tracked through treatment and back to work if proposals due to be published in the spring are accepted.

New Story


Launchpad for a healthy legacy - The Times 16th January 2007


Professor Ian Gilmore tells David Rose that public health, patient care and promoting best practice are just three of the challenges facing the Royal College of Physicians

New Story


Calm down, you really are hysterical - The Times 16th January 2007


There is new research that suggests the discredited illness has a sound neurological basis. Perhaps because it brings to mind witches, the possessed and deranged women to whom its diagnosis was once loosely applied, hysteria has long been known as the illness that dare not speak its name. At one time a catch-all phrase for “problem” women, it describes a condition in which psychological abnormalities result in a host of bodily ills.

New Story


Blair wants Whitehall to share your data - The Telegraph 16th January 2007


The Government was accused yesterday of setting up a database "from the cradle to the grave" on every citizen after Tony Blair announced plans to make it easier for departments to share information. Opposition parties and civil liberties groups warned that any shared database across Whitehall and local government would be "ripe for corruption and fraud" and would breach people's privacy.

New Story


What five cigarettes a day does to your arteries - Daily Mail 15th January 2007


Discs are monitoring my heart rate and on my neck an ultrasound device is allowing the sonographer to take a look inside my carotid artery, through which blood from my heart is being pumped to my brain.

New Story


My heavy periods were a sign I was at risk of infertility - Daily Mail 15th January 2007


Last year, Julia Bradbury, a presenter on BBC1's Watchdog, underwent surgery for endometriosis. This painful condition affects up to two million women in the UK and can cause infertility. Although it is treatable, some don't discover they have the condition until it is too late.

New Story


MRSA - It's even worse than you think - Daily Mail 15th January 2007


Over the past weeks and months, the subject of MRSA has never been far from Claire Rayner’s mind. It’s not just that as president of the Patients Association the topic dominates her in-tray, so much as the fact that last October she was struck down by the superbug for the third time in five years.

New Story


Hormone 'no anti-ageing elixir' - BBC Health News 16th January 2007


There is no proof that growth hormone therapy makes people live longer, say US scientists. The therapy has been touted in some quarters as a way to prevent - or even reverse - ageing.

New Story


Thousands ignore glaucoma advice - BBC Health News 16th January 2007


People with glaucoma who fail to use prescribed medication regularly are losing their sight unnecessarily, according to a leading charity. The Royal National Institute of the Blind (RNIB) is launching a campaign to encourage people to follow medical advice.

New Story


Hope over 'obesity-busting gum' - BBC Health News 15th January 2007


Scientists are looking at whether an appetite-suppressing chewing gum could be used to tackle obesity. The Imperial College London team are developing a drug based on a natural gut hormone that mimics the body's "feeling full" response.


International News

New Story


New medical research - The Times 16th January 2007


People suffering from post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD) appear to be much less sensitive to pain than normal, says a study of 24 soldiers in the Archives of General Psychiatry (Jan). Brain scans indicate that men with PTSD show altered pain processing when their hands are subjected to uncomfortable stimuli, reports the Rudolph Magnus Institute of Neuroscience in the Netherlands.


New Story


Child abuse link to future health - BBC Health News 16th January 2007


Children who suffer abuse have an increased risk of physical ill health in adulthood, results suggest. Researchers at King's College London followed 1,000 people in New Zealand from birth to the age of 32.


New Story


Japan confirms bird flu outbreak - BBC Health News 16th January 2007


Officials in Japan have confirmed that a recent outbreak of bird flu at a poultry farm was the deadly H5N1 strain of the virus. Almost 4,000 chickens died at a farm in Miyazaki on the southern island of Kyushu last week, and the remaining 8,000 birds were culled on Sunday.

New Section


Cheshire and Merseyside News

New Story


Look at me mum, I can really walk - Liverpool Echo 15th January 2007


CALLUM Boan, the little boy who touched the hearts of ECHO readers, has finally taken his first steps. Today, the three-year-old is back at home in St Helens after undergoing life-changing botox surgery. He has taken his first tentative steps after receiving the revolutionary injections at Cromwell Hospital in London.


New Story


Staff mourn nurse found strangled at her home - Liverpool Echo 15th January 2007


STAFF at a Liverpool hospital today paid tribute to a colleague found strangled at her home. Sandra Wilson, 43, was found at Gladstone Way, Newton-le-Willows, in the early hours of January 6.

New Section


Cumbria and Lancashire News

New Story


Manslaughter Trial of Psychiatrist Due to Start - Carlisle News & Star 15th January 2007


The trial of a former west Cumberland hospital psychiatrist who is accused of manslaughter was due to begin at Carlisle Crown Court today. Peter Fisher, 45, denies the offence.


New Story


Contract wrangle leaves patients without TVs - Lancashire Telegraph 15th January 2007


PATIENTS' groups and MPs have called for urgent action after a wrangle between health bosses and a private firm has left patients at Blackburn's new super hospital with no TVs or telephones.
And health bosses have now threatened to pull the plug on an electronics firm which agreed to put in the systems.


New Story


MP defends health stance - Lancashire Telegraph 15th January 2007


BURNLEY MP Kitty Ussher has defended her stance against Whitehall plans for the NHS after she was named in a national newspaper as one of 11 ministers opposed to their own government's proposals. Mrs Ussher, a Parliamentary Private Secretary at the Department for Trade and Industry, was among the ministers named in the Guardian as opponents of the government plans.

New Section


Greater Manchester News

New Story


Corrie star heads campaign - The Bolton News 15th January 2007


CHILDREN are being asked for their views on how doctors could do better. Coronation Street's Rosie Webster, played by Bury actress, Helen Flanagan, is launching a poster competition to encourage youngsters to speak up.


New Story


Pledge to keep hospital cuts to minimum - The Bolton News 15th January 2007


HEALTH bosses have vowed to keep cash cuts at the Royal Bolton Hospital to a minimum. NHS chiefs have announced plans to privatise some medical services in a move that would axe £3.7 million from the hospital's budget and lead to up to 130 job losses.

New Section


Podcast


Listen to this edition of Another 15 Minutes...Health News from Fade Listen to this edition of Another 15 Minutes...Health News from Fade

Saturday, January 13, 2007

Another 15 Minutes...Health News from Fade

Another 15 Minutes is currently experiencing navigation issues as a result of software changes, as soon as we identify a solution the navigation menu will return, we apologise for any inconvenience this causes.


Listen to this edition of Another 15 Minutes...Health News from Fade Listen to Saturday's edition of Another 15 Minutes...Health News from Fade
Listen to this edition of Another 15 Minutes...Health News from Fade Listen to Sunday's edition of Another 15 Minutes...Health News from Fade
Listen to this edition of Another 15 Minutes...Health News from Fade Listen to Monday's edition of Another 15 Minutes...Health News from Fade

New Section


National News


GM hens' medicinal eggs aid cancer fight - The Guardian 15th January 2007

The UK's leading cancer charity yesterday welcomed work by British scientists who created a breed of genetically modified hens that can produce cancer-fighting medicines in their eggs. The research could slash the cost of producing drugs and potentially save the NHS millions of pounds. Helen Sang, of the Roslin Institute in Edinburgh, where Dolly the sheep was cloned in 1997, genetically modified hens to lay eggs that contained complex medicinal proteins similar to the drugs used to treat multiple sclerosis, skin cancer and arthritis.

Additional Story

The GM hens whose eggs are designed to save lives - Daily Mail 14th January 2007

Additional Story

Anti-cancer chicken eggs produced - BBC Health News 14th January 2007


New Story

Philippe Legrain: Don't believe this claptrap. Migrants are no threat to us - The Guardian 15th January 2007

Immigration energises our economy, and has made many Britons more productive. We should welcome it


New Story

Desperation, babies and money make for an uncontrollable combination - The Guardian 15th January 2007

IVF is big business, and doctors can get very rich. But there are problems, and its regulation can create huge conflicts

Additional Story

Leading IVF doctor investigated - BBC Health News 15th January 2007


New Story

Chewing gum drug could help curb obesity epidemic - The Guardian 15th January 2007

An appetite-suppressing chewing gum or injection could be used to tackle Britain's obesity epidemic. Scientists are developing a way to emulate the body's natural signals for feeling full using a drug based on a natural gut hormone produced after every meal. It is likely to be developed as as an injectable drug, but the scientists also believe it could eventually be taken orally and incorporated into a gum, or used in a nasal spray.

Additional Story

Anti-hunger hormone to help fight against obesity - The Independent 15th January 2007


New Story

First person: Nick Wallis, 22 - The Guardian 15th January 2007

Nick Wallis is 22 and has a life-limiting condition. With no girlfriend on the horizon, he feared he would never enjoy a full relationship. Here, he tells why he decided that the only way to experience sex was to pay for it ...


New Story

Catholics' ID aims to avert ward euthanasia - The Observer 14th January 2007

Catholics fearing an increasing acceptance of euthanasia in Britain are carrying religious 'ID cards' telling doctors not to withhold liquid from the patient. Tens of thousands have been sold on the website of the Association of Catholic Women. It reads: 'In case of my admission to hospital, please contact a Roman Catholic priest. I would like my nursing care to include fluids - however administered.'


New Story

Simon Garfield investigates the symptoms, treatment and prognosis of dyslexia - The Observer 14th January 2007

More than 100 years after 'word blindness' was first discovered, thousands of children with great potential are still marginalised by an education system unable to cope with a common but silent disorder. Simon Garfield investigates the symptoms, treatment and prognosis of dyslexia

Additional Story

My dyslexic boys never went private, says Blunkett - The Observer 14th January 2007

Additional Story

Kelly axed 2,700 special needs places - The Sunday Times 14th January 2007

Additional Story

So, that's one happy parent - The Sunday Telegraph News 14th January 2007


New Story