Author Topic: National Health Service  (Read 170643 times)

0 Members and 1 Guest are viewing this topic.

Offline SteveH

  • Management Board Member & Newsgroup Editor
  • *
  • Posts: 14533
Re: National Health Service
« Reply #360 on: October 09, 2022, 10:24:57 am »
They should not be put in this position ................   &shake&

'Please support us': One nurse's powerful message as strike ballots begin over better pay

Nurses have received a wave of support after the Royal College of Nursing in Wales, England and Scotland began balloting its members over strike action. It is the first time in its 106-year history that the union has balloted and comes at a time of intense pressure for the NHS.

Yet most clearly seem to be in support of the 300,000 nurses who are threatening to walk out over pay. The result of the ballot is due next month.

cont  https://www.walesonline.co.uk/news/health/please-support-us-one-nurses-25210333?IYA-reg=49560bcd-5a9c-47f0-8fc5-ba2e71710589


North Wales health board has more than 600 nursing vacancies amid call for better pay and conditions
The number of vacancies in Wales has risen from 1,719 to at least 2,690 in the last year, according to the Royal College of Nursing


There are currently 636 nursing vacancies within Betsi Cadwaladr University Health Board, according to the Royal College of Nursing. Since 2021, the number of registered nurse vacancies across Wales has risen from 1,719 to at least 2,690.

Within that same period, there has also been a deficit in in social care nursing staff, with 319 [experienced] leaving the profession in 2021 and only 204 [Trainees] joining. The figures paint an alarming picture of the pressure and retention issues facing the nursing workforce across Wales, and North Wales in particular.

cont https://www.dailypost.co.uk/news/north-wales-news/north-wales-health-board-more-25204285

Offline Helig

  • Management board member
  • *
  • Posts: 662
Re: National Health Service
« Reply #361 on: October 10, 2022, 10:35:04 am »
There was a report in Saturday's paper that they are going to do to doctors what they have done to dentists. That is you will  only get to see a doctor if you pay and go privately. There are firms setting up in England which provide a doctor for people to pay to see. They cannot access a GP otherwise. It is thought the NHS GP service will collapse due to so few GPs being available now.


Offline SteveH

  • Management Board Member & Newsgroup Editor
  • *
  • Posts: 14533
Re: National Health Service
« Reply #362 on: October 14, 2022, 10:01:42 am »
Life in A&E at Glan Clwyd Hospital after scathing reports and ?two years of hell?

MIDWAY through a bright autumnal morning at Ysbyty Glan Clwyd, Bodelwyddan, in its less-than-half-full emergency department (ED) waiting area, head of nursing Sali Williams warns not to tempt fate by breaking one of the hospital?s golden rules.

?Don?t say the Q word!? she smiles, having already seen too much in her seven months at Glan Clwyd to take anything for granted.

It?s a sensible stance to take, not least while such perennial headaches as COVID-19, staffing shortages, and demand outweighing discharges persist.

cont https://www.northwalespioneer.co.uk/news/23044484.life-e-glan-clwyd-hospital-scathing-reports-two-years-hell/

Offline SteveH

  • Management Board Member & Newsgroup Editor
  • *
  • Posts: 14533
Re: National Health Service.......Flu comes early
« Reply #363 on: October 22, 2022, 10:38:36 am »
Flu comes early, with hospital cases rising

Cases of flu have climbed quickly in the past week, suggesting the season has begun earlier than normal, say officials.

People may have little immunity to flu after a break from the disease during Covid pandemic restrictions.

The UK Health Security Agency (UKHSA) says hospital and ICU admissions for the respiratory disease are rising the fastest in children under five.

Hospital rates are going up among the elderly too.

It's not clear how big a wave the UK might be in for - levels are still relatively low overall.

But health experts are urging anyone who is eligible for a flu shot to get one.

Many southern hemisphere nations have just had their most rampant influenza season for years and officials have been warning that the UK must prepare for a big, early wave of flu too.

More than 40 million people, including young children, in the UK are being offered a flu vaccine.

The over-50s and younger adults with health conditions are also being offered a Covid booster jab this autumn and winter.

Vaccination can help prevent people getting very sick.

Both shots are recommended for those at higher risk of illness.

cont https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/health-63341574

Offline SteveH

  • Management Board Member & Newsgroup Editor
  • *
  • Posts: 14533
Re: National Health Service.....Jobs
« Reply #364 on: October 24, 2022, 10:16:55 am »
The NHS has launched its annual nationwide drive to recruit more nurses as it tries to fill tens of thousands of vacancies

The role as a ?life-changing profession? where people can make a difference to someone?s life, but the drive comes as NHS staff are preparing for a challenging winter with the combined impact of flu, Covid and record vacancies.

The campaign ? called We Are The NHS ? spotlights the varied NHS nursing roles on offer and features patients who tell of how nurses helped them towards recovery.

NHS points out that more than six in 10 people are considering a career change over the next year, and nursing degrees offer strong employment prospects. It states that 94% of nursing graduates are able to find jobs within six months

Helping people from different walks of life and settings could be offered by the available nursing roles.

https://www.wales.nhs.uk/nhswalesaboutus

Offline SteveH

  • Management Board Member & Newsgroup Editor
  • *
  • Posts: 14533
Re: National Health Service
« Reply #365 on: October 26, 2022, 10:28:54 am »
'Friends and neighbours' needed to help 'stranded' patients get home from hospital
Betsti Cadwaladr chairman Mark Polin believes 'community spirt' can be enlisted to prevent 'winter pressures' overwhelming the NHS

At a time when there is so much economic uncertainty, we are all going to have to help each other a lot more ? and galvanise our sense of community spirit. Research tells us such financial hardships impact directly on people?s wellbeing, including the elderly.

Coming into a winter period when we are expecting a double whammy of a virulent flu strain and the new normal of Covid infection, Betsi Cadwaladr University Health Board is exploring every way of reducing the strain on services. I have spoken before about how Covid and flu can affect our workforce.

A reduced workforce inevitably means services are impacted, so we are currently asking staff to get vaccinated against both flu and Covid. I would implore every member of the public who is eligible to get their jabs when invited as well.

cont https://www.dailypost.co.uk/news/north-wales-news/friends-neighbours-needed-help-stranded-25352916

Offline SteveH

  • Management Board Member & Newsgroup Editor
  • *
  • Posts: 14533
Re: National Health Service ....Recruitment Open Day
« Reply #366 on: October 29, 2022, 10:42:11 am »
NURSES at Glan Clwyd Hospital have reacted to staff shortages by arranging their own recruitment day.

The nursing professionals are busy finalising plans for the open day on Saturday, November 12, which begins at 10am and finishes at 3pm.

Betsi Cadwaladr University Health Board (BCUHB) currently has a staffing problem; the health board has been too reliant on locum and agency staff, in common with most health boards in Wales, because of staff vacancies.

It is hoped the day will attract those interested in applying for qualified nursing roles as well as the Apprenctice Healthcare Assistant programme.

The scheme lasts for two years and apprenctices gain NVQ qualifications plus, hopefully, a full-time job on completion.

Jane Woollard, Glan Clwyd Hospital?s director of nursing, said: ?We want people aged between 18 and 25, who have an interest in healthcare, to come along and see what a rewarding career this can be.

?Nursing is a tough job, though really rewarding, and the support given by our healthcare assistants is vital. We need more and we can offer on the job training and career advancement to those who want to make it their vocation.

?We?ve seen healthcare support workers make that transition into Band 5 nursing and it fills us with pride to see their progression.

?We also want to see registered nurses on our open day. It doesn?t matter whether you are newly qualified or experienced ? it?s about compassionate care for the people of North Wales.

?We need you to work either in our acute sites or out in the community and our links with colleges and universities afford plenty of opportunity for development ? even up to PhD level if that is your aim.?

For more information about the opportunities on offer email Rhian Jones, lead recruitment nurse for Glan Clwyd Hospital, at Rhian.Jones9@wales.nhs.uk or Jane Woollard, IHC associate director of nursing, at Jane.Woollard@wales.nhs.uk

Offline SteveH

  • Management Board Member & Newsgroup Editor
  • *
  • Posts: 14533
Re: National Health Service
« Reply #367 on: November 07, 2022, 10:12:13 am »
Nurses are traumatised and fed up..........

Concerns about patient care and staff shortages are among the reasons nurses are backing a strike, a nurse has said.

Leanne Lewis voted in favour of a walkout in the Royal College of Nursing's (RCN) ballot, the results of which are due in a few days' time.

Ms Lewis, 47, who trained as a nurse in 1995, said: "I felt we needed to take action. Enough is enough."

The Welsh government called on the UK government to provide more funding for public sector pay rises.

The UK government said it had followed the NHS Pay Review Body's recommendations.

cont https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-wales-63539587

Offline SteveH

  • Management Board Member & Newsgroup Editor
  • *
  • Posts: 14533
Re: National Health Service
« Reply #368 on: November 11, 2022, 10:38:06 am »
In 2018 whilst in hospital, I got talking to a nurse from Liverpool, who was an agency nurse, and was traveling over to Wales for a few weeks, because it would pay for the new kitchen his wife wanted.

Desperate NHS pays up to ?2,500 for nursing shifts

NHS bosses are increasingly paying premium rates for agency staff to plug holes in rotas, the BBC has found.

Spending in this area rose by 20% last year to hit ?3bn in England.

For many shifts, bosses have been so short-staffed they have been willing to breach the government pay caps for these agency workers, most of whom are doctors and nurses.

Separate data supplied by Labour showed some NHS trusts had paid as much as ?2,500 to nurses to fill shifts.

Out of 60 responses from trusts, 10 reported the most expensive shift cost over ?2,000, and for another 13 it was between ?1,000-2,000.

Doctors are likely to be getting even more.

The BBC spoke to one cancer doctor who was offered work for ?130 an hour - well above the cap for his role - and described the fees available as "astonishing" and a reflection of "desperation by management".

cont https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/health-63588959

Offline SteveH

  • Management Board Member & Newsgroup Editor
  • *
  • Posts: 14533
Re: National Health Service............Dentist academy
« Reply #369 on: November 26, 2022, 10:44:01 am »
Maybe not local, but good for the area............

A new ?2.2m dental academy is hoping to fill Wales' "chronic" dental shortage by "doing something different".

The aim of the development, at Ty Glyder in Bangor, Gwynedd, is to attract new dentists and make it easier for patients to get treatment.

Betsi Cadwaladr health board has among the lowest dental treatment figures in Wales.

The recently opened facility will provide eight dental clinics and, from 2023, will house a dental academy.

This would double the capacity of the four clinics that were lost when dental practices in Bangor and Menai Bridge closed in recent years.

The practice has received more than 8,000 enquiries in three weeks and has had to freeze registration until more dentists are recruited.

"In Bangor we've had no NHS dentist provision for four years now, so rather than opening a standard practice, we've done something different" said the health board's Peter Greensmith.

Peter Greensmith said the facility will increase opportunities for training for dentists
The building, which contains a high street dental practice, training academy and a community dental service, will replace the former clinic at Ysbyty Gwynedd.

"The capacity which we bring through the practice was much needed, but we also needed something to attract people to stay in north Wales and to come and work in north Wales," explained Mr Greensmith.

Dr Joanna Smith has just been appointed as one of the new practice dentists, and one of the things that attracted her was the ability to work and study at the same time.

"I actually got offered the job today and got the great news that I'm going to be able to work in general dental practice here in this beautiful location, and do a master's degree," she said.

"As a dentist you tend to pick between going into general practice, so being like a high street dentist, or going into hospital. To be able to have almost a hybrid of both of those here is excellent."

cont https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-wales-63755892

Offline SteveH

  • Management Board Member & Newsgroup Editor
  • *
  • Posts: 14533
Re: National Health Service
« Reply #370 on: November 29, 2022, 09:59:25 am »
Healthcare services across North Wales are facing a "perfect storm" of winter pressures, according to the health board. With a peak in Covid and flu cases expected in early December, Betsi Cadwaladr University Health Board (BCUHB) has stressed the importance of reducing the risk of infection to lessen the impact on services across the region.

Betsi Cadwaladr faces increased pressure on services every winter, but this year they are up against unprecedented demands. The so-called "triple threat" of respiratory infections - Covid, flu, and RSV (respiratory syncytial virus) is expected to peak over the coming week.

Combined with infection rates, the recently announced nursing strike in December is set to add to pre-existing staffing issues across the region. Alongside wider issues such as the cost of living crisis, soaring energy costs, and fuel shortages, the health board has warned it's facing a "perfect storm."

BCUHB says contingency planning for winter 2022/23 has been months in the making, to ensure that patients and staff are protected. Part of this planning included re-introducing face coverings to healthcare settings on November 14, after there was an increase in Covid-19 transmission within hospitals.

cont https://www.dailypost.co.uk/news/north-wales-news/perfect-storm-winter-pressures-facing-25620133

Offline SteveH

  • Management Board Member & Newsgroup Editor
  • *
  • Posts: 14533
Re: National Health Service
« Reply #371 on: November 30, 2022, 02:12:42 pm »
Cost of living 'another stress' for NHS staff with many 'feeling the pinch'
Betsti Cadwaladr chairman Mark Polin says financial hardship amongst healthcare staff is 'of real concern'

It seems all four nations in the UK are starting to feel the bite of recession and here in Wales we are no exception. Obviously, this affects the health of society as a whole, with plenty of research showing how the physical and mental wellbeing of those enduring financial hardship is disproportionately affected.

Inflation is also having an effect on the health board. As just one example, we are expecting to pay an extra ?30m in energy costs in this financial year. Yet, the effect on those who care for our communities is of real concern to me.

We know many of our staff are feeling the pinch as prices rise and it is another stress on top of nearly three years of coping with Covid. The subsequent huge influx of patients, often with severe illness as an effect of the pandemic, has only served to put them under more pressure.

As a board we are committed to helping our colleagues, who consistently go above and beyond the call of duty to try and keep the population safe and well. We have a dedicated group looking at what assistance we can give to staff to help them through this most trying of times ? and pay is currently a huge issue for nurses, as it is for many workers.

We cannot control the pay rise our nursing staff receive. This is something dictated by Central Government - and I understand only too well the pressures upon finances. What we do know for sure is Royal College of Nursing members have voted for industrial action across most health boards in Wales - and Betsi Cadwaladr University Health Board is one of those which could be affected in some way.

cont https://www.dailypost.co.uk/news/north-wales-news/cost-living-another-stress-nhs-25630897

Offline SteveH

  • Management Board Member & Newsgroup Editor
  • *
  • Posts: 14533
Re: National Health Service
« Reply #372 on: December 01, 2022, 10:40:29 am »
More than 11,000 ambulances a week are caught in queues of at least an hour outside A&E units in England, a BBC News analysis shows.

The total - the highest since records began, in 2010 - means one in seven crews faced delays on this scale by late November.

Paramedics warned the problems were causing patients severe harm.

Ambulance system 'facing perfect storm'
Both ambulance response times and A&E waits have hit their worst levels on record in all parts of the UK in recent months.

They are thought to be among the worst delays in the country but none of England's ambulance services is close to the target, while Wales, Scotland and Northern Ireland are all missing their targets.

cont / stats https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/health-63808516

Offline SteveH

  • Management Board Member & Newsgroup Editor
  • *
  • Posts: 14533
Re: National Health Service
« Reply #373 on: December 08, 2022, 10:55:10 am »
FROM treating patients in cupboards and corridors to working 12-hour shifts without breaks, doctors have laid bare their experiences to highlight the risks to patient and staff safety.

The doctor?s union BMA Cymru Wales has released the findings of their NHS pressures portal, a place where doctors from across Wales have shared accounts of the state of their working conditions and the pressures they face on a daily basis.

One account from the portal, by a doctor at Betsi Cadwaladr University Health Board (BCUHB), said: ?Waiting for 12-14 hours in the emergency department is now the norm. Practices such as using corridors, which was stopped during the first waves of Covid, unfortunately has now restarted.?

cont https://www.northwalespioneer.co.uk/news/23176592.doctors-describe-working-conditions-wales-pressures-faced/

Offline SteveH

  • Management Board Member & Newsgroup Editor
  • *
  • Posts: 14533
Re: National Health Service
« Reply #374 on: December 13, 2022, 10:22:18 am »
Welsh budget for NHS and public services to be revealed
The Welsh government is giving councils and the NHS ?70m so social care workers can receive the current real living wage rate.

It was a Labour manifesto commitment, but workers will not get the benefit of the ?10.90 wage rate until June 2023.
The Welsh government has said it will do all it can to protect frontline public services in its budget.

cont https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-wales-politics-63945892


The nurses strike planned for Wales will go ahead after the Royal College of Nursing (RCN) and Welsh government failed to come to a pay agreement.
Nurses in all but one health board in Wales will be striking on Thursday and 20 December.

The RCN said Health Minister Eluned Morgan had failed to put forward an increase to the current pay award.
The Welsh government said it could not make an increased pay offer without extra funding from the UK government.

cont https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-wales-63950032