Tag Archives: carers

New era of five-yearly doctor checks starts

19 October 2012 Last updated at 07:17

New era of five-yearly doctor checks starts

By Nick Triggle Health correspondent, BBC News

Health Secretary Jeremy Hunt: “Doctors will get a chance to address deficiencies”

Regular checks on doctors’ skills will start from December, heralding the biggest shake-up in medical regulation for more than 150 years.

The UK’s 220,000 doctors will have annual appraisals, with a decision taken every five years on whether they are fit to continue working.

But it will be April 2016 before the vast majority of the first round of checks have been done.

The health secretary said it was about addressing “deficiencies” in skills.

Jeremy Hunt said that if doctors failed to satisfy the standards of the General Medical Council (GMC) they would be prevented from practising.

But he said the new system was about identifying where there were “gaps” in knowledge or skills and giving doctors a “chance to put those issues right”.

Dementia awareness days for people working in telecare

Date of article: 19-Oct-12

Article By: Rachel Baker, News Editor

Dementia awareness days are taking place throughout the country to deepen service providers’ understanding of and insight into dementia, with the next one taking place in Bristol on 29 November.

Being held in partnership with the Telecare Services Association (TSA), Clare Price, an occupational therapist at Just Checking, the web-based activity monitoring system enabling family members to manage the on-going care and support of a person with dementia in their own home, has devised and is now delivering the awareness days for those working within telecare.

How the digital divide is being tackled

Digital exclusion is a social care issue, whether it’s ordering prescriptions, applying for benefits or simply talking to others. So what is being done to help more people get online?

Jessica Fuhl
Guardian Professional, Wednesday 17 October 2012 09.30 BST

 

Carlton Gaskin at one of Age UK’s Itea and biscuits event, aimed at getting more older people using technology.

In 2008, 84-year-old Margaret Rickson had never used a computer before, but within three weeks of picking up a laptop she became the first patient to ask for a repeat prescription online. After enrolling for a computer course at her local library in Cheshire, Rickson has become an active campaigner in the local community, promoting the benefits of online services.

This week is Get online week. Organised by the Online Centres Foundation, which provides a national network of UK online centres, the aim is to get some of the approximately eight million people in the UK who have never used the internet online to “help make their lives bigger and better”. Margaret Rickson is just the type of person whom the Online Centres Foundation would champion as an ambassador for the advantages of accessing digital services.

The benefits of getting online are even greater than ever. In April a new universal credit will be introduced replacing many current benefits – and the government wants 80% of applications for universal credit to be online by 2017. Those not online can lose out financially, by not being able to access goods that can be found cheaper than in shops, and socially, without contact with others though email and social networking sites.