Tag Archives: NHS

Mental health nurses to patrol streets of North Yorkshire with police

The county is one of four revealed by Care and Support

MENTAL health nurses will patrol the streets with police officers as part of a pilot initiative in North Yorkshire.

The county is one of four revealed by Care and Support Minister Norman Lamb today and will see the nurses sent to incidents where police believe people need immediate mental health support.

Street triage services already operate in neighbouring Cleveland and have shown good results.

Home carers save the county £164m

Redditch home carers are wonderful

By Ian Dipple Friday 21 June 2013 Updated: 21/06 07:53

Latest News

THE BOROUGH’s growing army of unpaid carers are saving the county’s social care sector an estimated £164million a year but are being left to struggle with little or no support or financial help.

According to expert analysis the 8,889 people across the borough caring for a loved one save the public purse an average of £18,473 a year each in care which would otherwise have to be provided by the state at a cost of £18 an hour.

More than 2,000 of those are providing over 50 hours of unpaid care a week.

Figures from the 2011 census show in the last ten years the number of unpaid carers in the borough has grown by over 1,000 but charities warn the actual figure is likely to be much higher as many people do not class themselves as carers and consider caring for a loved one just part of their family duty.

The biggest increase is in the number of people aged 65 and over now classing themselves as carers which has grown by 60 per cent since 2001 to 1,762 – reflecting the borough’s ageing population and increase in conditions such as dementia.

But in return for their contribution the amount available in carer’s allowance is just £59.75 a week – or £3,107 a year – and it is only available to people aged 16 and over and who spend at least 35 hours a week caring for their loved one.

A&E crisis leads to surge in cancelled operations

Doctors raise alarm as surgery is hit, after figures show cancellations have reached a 10-year high

The Observer,

 

More than 220 operations a day were cancelled with less than 24 hours’ notice during the first three months of 2013

More planned operations were cancelled in the first few months of this year than for any similar period in almost a decade, it has been revealed, as senior surgeons warn that the crisis in accident and emergency is cascading through the NHS.

More than 220 operations a day were cancelled with less than 24 hours’ notice during the first three months of 2013, official figures show. A similar scale of cancellations of elective surgery has not been seen since 2004-5. NHS England figures further reveal that the proportion of those patients not treated within 28 days of being turned away from operating tables has crept up to 5.6% – a four-year high.

The number of urgent operations cancelled every month has also doubled under the coalition, from 172 in August 2010 to 401 in April this year.