Category Archives: Carers

Whose Shoes? – Making It Real. Launch event

WhoseShoes

Making it real, making real people have real voices

[youtube]http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=myd8yU5raEc[/youtube]

Launch of the new electronic tool to help you engage all your key
people in the transformation of health and social care.
‘Making It Real’ is a co-produced approach to personalisation spelling out what it really means to engage with the ‘personalisation agenda’ and help people have choice and control over their own support needs and a good quality of life.

http://nutshellcomms.co.uk/

Anti-stigma project helps GPs treat people with mental health problems

Time to Change hopes its model for raising awareness  among primary care staff can be rolled out across the country

Guardian Professional,          

Time to Change has made headway in  changing attitudes among clinicians and support staff.

It seems like common sense that the first place someone with a health problem  is likely to turn for help is their GP, who is expected to deal with them in an  appropriate manner. For people with mental  health problems, however, this isn’t necessarily the case. According to the  anti-stigma campaign Time  to Change (TTC), many people experiencing mental distress arrive at the GP  surgery to find that primary care professionals are ill-equipped to deal with  their needs. Sometimes the sheer volume of work GPs must contend with means  there aren’t the resources available. But often a lack of awareness and training  about mental health issues means patients do not receive the care and attention  they need.

Malnutrition among older people: A lack of food and thought

There are an estimated 3 million people in the UK suffering from malnutrition but, despite the public health implications, the issue receives very little attention. So how can awareness be raised?

Denis Campbell
The Guardian, Wednesday 29 May 2013

 

Domestic carers who only visit an old person’s home once a week may not realise the person they look after is not eating enough. Images Group Editorial
Malnutrition among older people

Domestic carers who only visit an old person’s home once a week may not realise the person they look after is not eating enough. Photograph: BSIP/Universal Images Group Editorial

For some people the word “malnutrition” inevitably conjures up mental images of starving children in Africa. But it is also an issue much closer to home, here in the United Kingdom. About 3 million people in the UK are estimated to either suffer from malnourishment or be at risk of becoming underfed. The resulting problems are believed to cost the public sector several billion pounds, for example from avoidable hospital admissions and extra GP visits for treatments of the range of illnesses malnutrition can cause. The National Institute for Health and Care Excellence (Nice) has identified better nutritional care as the sixth-largest potential source of savings in the NHS.