Monthly Archives: August 2013

PM orders probe into death of eight babies in Miskolc hospital

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PM orders probe into death of eight babies in Miskolc hospital

Miskolc, Hungary- Prime Minister Viktor Orban has ordered an extraordinary investigation concerning the recent death of eight premature babies in the county hospital of Miskolc in northern Hungary, the government’s information centre told MTI.

State secretary for health Miklos Szocska told public Kossuth Radio on Tuesday that the investigation sought to establish a connection between the deaths, which occured at the hospital’s premature ward between August 5 and 10. He said that the hospital management had alarmed health authorities after the third death and took measures but could not prevent further deaths which occured in rapid succession.

Late on Monday, Szocska visited the hospital and said that closing down the ward was not necessary.

Hospital director Gabor Csiba has been suspended from his position for the time of the investigation.

Update: Ninth baby dies in Miskolc hospital

Another premature baby has died in the central hospital of Miskolc – the ninth in a row in the past 10 days, the hospital told MTI on Wednesday.

According to the hospital’s statement, the baby had been in a critical condition and had undergone repeated abdomenal operations. The baby had been in isolated intensive care and was not in direct contact with any of the previous cases, the statement added.

“The baby was born with very thin chances of life,” the statement said.

Two of the deceased babies’ parents have submitted reports to police independently from each other, the national police headquarters communication service told MTI on Wednesday. In the report they said that negligence by hospital staff could have played a role in the deaths. The reports were submitted on August 9 and they were later transferred to the national bureau of investigation, the statement said.

Prime Minister Viktor ordered an extraordinary investigation concerning the deaths on Monday.

State secretary for health Miklos Szocska said on the government’s website on Tuesday that a wider disciplinary investigation will be conducted to look into baby and pregnancy care, cooperation between wards, delivery and intensive premature baby care as well as the hospital’s general procedures and hygienic status. Szocska said the tests so far had not shown any connections between the deaths.

source: MTI, politics.hu

 

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Calculate your personal hydration needs

hydracoach

Calculate your personal hydration needs

Sportline HydraCoach

We’ve all heard the advice that we need to drink more H20. Now, there’s finally a water bottle that makes that advice harder to ignore. The HydraCoach is, to put it bluntly, the smartest bottle you’ll ever squeeze. For starters, it’ll calculate your personal hydration goals—a daily recommendation of how much water you should imbibe. Then it tracks the amount of fluid you’ve consumed and displays it on a small LED screen embedded on the front. When you’re behind on sips, it helps you pick up the pace. Not quite the most fun drinking game we’ve ever played, but certainly healthier.

Calculates your personal hydration needs, tracks your consumption, paces you throughout the day and motivates you to stick to your goal. Find it on Amazon for $20.

Find more useful fitness and health gadgets here: http://www.menshealth.com/fitness/best-running-gear

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Natural Remedies For Sinus Infections

how to cure sinus infection

Natural Remedies For Sinus Infections

When it comes to sinus infections, it’s hard to say what’s worse — the relentless nose blowing, the unbearable pressure and pain in your face, or the postnasal drip that makes it impossible to sleep. Antibiotics used to be the go-to method for dealing with the misery, but now doctors are thinking twice since research shows antibiotics don’t ease patients’ symptoms.

You don’t have to suffer through a sinus infection. There are many natural, yet effective remedies to help relieve your symptoms so give these a try.

  • Get steamy: The heat and steam from a hot shower does wonders for congestion and sinus pressure. Close the bathroom door and run the shower on hot for a few minutes, staying in the bathroom to breathe in the steam. Lower the temp and hop in, allowing the hot water to gently massage your sensitive sinuses. If you don’t want to get in the shower, you can also place a towel over your head, and lean over a pot of hot water, breathing in the vapor.
  • Try a Neti pot: To loosen up mucus and help it make its way out of your sinuses, give a Neti pot a try. Follow the instructions, adding noniodized salt and warm sterile (not tap) water to the pot. Mix it well, place the spout in one nostril, lean over the sink, and gently flush out allergens and mucus. If you’re really clogged, try using it after a hot shower. If this freaks you out, use an over-the-counter nasal saline spray instead.
  • Hot compress: If the pressure is getting to you, run a washcloth under hot water, lie down and place the folded hot compress over your eyes. Gently press along your sinuses, massaging the sensitive areas to loosen up mucus.

Keep reading for more natural ways to get sinus infection relief.

  • Sleep with a humidifier: If your symptoms are worse at night, keep your head slightly propped up with some pillows and sleep with a cool mist humidifier on your night stand. A night of breathing in moist air can greatly improve symptoms in the morning.
  • Drink up: Make sure you’re drinking plenty of water. Staying hydrated can help loosen thick mucus, so you’re able to blow your nose effectively.
  • Get sweaty: If you’re feeling up for it, do a high-intensity cardio workout that gets you hot and sweaty, preferably on your own so you don’t risk getting others sick. This is a great way to get congestion relief.
  • Reduce triggers: If you suffer from chronic sinus infections, it may be allergy-related, and worth a trip to an allergist.
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Excellent Innovation for Ageing – a European Guide:

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Excellent Innovation for Ageing – a European Guide:

This guide aims to take you on a special journey through Europe: a tour of regions, cities and communities where you can see innovation for active and healthy ageing in real life. Now we know where to go when we need inspiring real-life examples of active and healthy ageing. We can finally see what we mean when, for example, we talk about ‘integrated care’, ‘independent living’ or ‘age friendly environments’. And we know how great the variety of technologies, services and approaches that help us make these visions a reality is.

The selection of Reference Sites for this guide was mainly done by themselves through a peer reviewed self-assessment based on key criteria such as EIPAHA relevance, scale, number of specific EIP actions to which they are committed, evidence and replication potential. On this basis they filled out questionnaires on their contribution to the different action areas of the European Innovation Partnership on Active and Healthy Ageing and on their overall strategy to tackle the demographic challenge in Europe. Then they scored each other based on this information. The results you find here: after one year evaluation process, we have now 32 Reference Sites from 12 Member States, with a ranking from 1 to 3 stars. Plenty of room for growth and competition for all, as four stars is the maximum.

All Reference Sites are willing to share with you what they have discovered on their expedition to excellent innovation for ageing. They found out what ageing people need to stay, active, independent and healthy for as long as possible, they have good ideas for how to innovate in the systems for health and social care in such a way that they cater to real needs in a more effective and efficient way. And some of them also found out if and how a healthy business can be made out of it.

Download: Excellent Innovation for Ageing – a European Guide: The Reference Sites of the European Innovation Partnership on Active and Healthy Ageing (.pdf, 5.163 KB).

Download from eHealthNews.eu Portal’s mirror: Excellent Innovation for Ageing – a European Guide: The Reference Sites of the European Innovation Partnership on Active and Healthy Ageing (.pdf, 5.163 KB).

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Cheap dental clinic opened in London by Hungarians

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One private surgery in Budapest, which became a hit with Brits ­going abroad to get their teeth fixed on the cheap, has now opened up in London. The clinic started opening just one day a week but is now so popular it is operating full time. And with a 30-minute consultation costing just £17.50, it is easy to see why it is already treating hundreds of ­British patients who are fed up with long NHS waiting lists and sky-high prices charged by private dentists.

Last night Simon Purchall, UK ­representative of the Smilesavers ­clinic, said demand had been ­unprecedented.“We have been really busy since we started and now we have had to go ­permanent,” he said. “We are providing the same good quality service with the same dentists that people have been enjoying for years in Hungary. “The only difference now is that you can have it done in the UK instead.” Promising to open more clinics across the nation, he said: “I don’t see why we can’t expand up north now as well. “The market is there and we can grow into it.”

Mr Purchall said it was healthy to have competition in the market. “A lot of dentists in the UK think they are in ­Switzerland, the prices they are charging,” he added. Bosses at Smilesavers have been flying Brits out to their state-of-the-art facility in the Hungarian ­capital for the past ten years. And after customers requested a UK base for follow-up appointments and yearly check-ups, they decided to set up a surgery over here. Mr Purchall said: “One of the main ­reasons why we set up the clinic in the UK was to provide aftercare. “We wanted somewhere over here for our customers to visit to save them ­flying out again.” The clinic is regulated by the Care Quality Commission. All its specialist dental surgeons, nursing staff and even receptionists are flown in from Hungary to work. Mr Purchall added: “Obviously the ­associated costs of running a clinic in London with rents and rates are much higher. But all our receptionists, ­nurses and dentists are flown in. “We are only using Hungarian staff so we still make a profit as our base wage costs are low.” Cut-price treatments include ­implants at £850 – a saving of £500 on standard London prices – plus fillings, root ­canal work, crowns and SDHpveneers. Annual check-ups cost just £50, whereas some ­private dental practices in the capital are charging up to £120. And braces for both ­children and adults are ­available for nearly half the standard price charged by a ­British ­dentist.

The article can be reached at: http://www.dailystar.co.uk/news/latest-news/331728/Hungarian-dentists-mean-it-s-jaw-wars-for-Britain

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Study:Novel 3-D Simulation Technology Helps Surgical Residents Train More Effectively

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Study:Novel 3-D Simulation Technology Helps Surgical Residents Train More Effectively

A novel interactive 3-dimensional (3-D) simulation platform offers surgical residents a unique opportunity to hone their diagnostic and patient management skills, and then have those skills accurately evaluated according to a new study appearing in the August issue of the Journal of the American College of Surgeons. The findings may help establish a new tool for assessing and training surgical residents.

Previous research studies have shown that the management of patient complications following operations is an extremely important skill set for surgeons to master. Therefore, in addition to performing operations, surgeons must also be able to effectively manage surgical patients in the emergency room, on the hospital floor unit, or in the intensive care unit. Until now, the standard approach for this instruction has been to learn to master this skill set on patients.

“The way we learn in residency currently has been called ‘training by chance,’ because you don’t know what is coming through the door next,” said study coauthor Rajesh Aggarwal, MD, PhD, MA, FRCS, a National Institute for Health Research (NIHR) clinician scientist in surgery at Imperial College, St. Mary’s Hospital in London. “What we are doing is taking the chance encounters out of the way residents learn and forming a structured approach to training.”

Using an online virtual world called Second Life™, a multidisciplinary team of researchers from Imperial College, St. Mary’s Hospital developed three virtual reality environments – a standard hospital ward, an intensive care unit, and an emergency room.

For the study, the researchers created modules for three common surgical scenarios: gastrointestinal bleeding, acute inflammation of the pancreas, and bowel obstruction. Each of these scenarios, which could be accessed through a laptop or personal computer, was designed to put the residents through their paces at three different levels of complexity.

“What we want to do – using this simulation platform – is to bring all the junior residents and senior residents up to the level of the attending surgeon, so that the time is shortened in terms of their learning curve in learning how to look after surgical patients,” Dr. Aggarwal said.

The study involved 63 surgeons – including interns and junior and senior residents, as well as attending surgeons whose performance was used as a benchmark. Each surgeon assessed and managed a series of virtual patients via this 3D interactive surgical world. The process involved taking a patient history, performing a physical, interpreting labs, diagnosing the disease, using chest X rays and CT scans, and implementing an appropriate management plan.

Using a validated rating scale, researchers then evaluated and rated each surgeon’s performance for each case he or she performed. The minimum score was eight and the maximum score was 56, which was equivalent to achieving 100 percent or performing at the level of an attending.

The study results showed significant gaps in performance between interns and attendings, as well as between junior and senior residents and attendings. For example, analysis of the level-one gastrointestinal bleeding module showed that interns scored 48, junior residents scored 50, senior residents scored 54, and attendings scored 56. For other cases, study results showed similar outcomes.

“What we have shown scientifically is that these three simulated scenarios at the three different levels are appropriate for the assessment of interns, junior residents, and senior residents and their management of these cases,” Dr. Aggarwal explained.

Moving forward, the research team plans to study how the implementation of this novel simulation technology will improve clinical outcomes of surgical patients cared for by residents. In future research, surgical residents and interns throughout London will train on this program, which will enable them to achieve the skill level of a senior resident or an attending. The idea is that this simulation training will help residents become more effective at managing patients in a clinical environment. Ultimately, the goal is to maintain and improve patient safety.

“Going through these different steps is not going to teach residents everything they need to know for every patient with bowel obstruction, for example, but it is going to teach them about the majority of patients that he or she is going to look after and it’s going to do it in a much more education-efficient and appropriate manner,” Dr. Aggarwal said. “This platform can also be used as a refresher so it can be used for the maintenance of their skills, not just the acquisition of their skills, and this goal can be achieved in a more efficient manner as well.”

Other study participants include Vishal Patel, MRCS; Daniel Cohen, MRCS; Dave Taylor, MSc, MBCS; Ara Darzi, KBE Hon FREng, FMedSci, MD, FACS, FRCS.

Grant support for this study was provided by the London Deanery and the National Institute for Health Research, United Kingdom.

Journal of the American College of Surgeons, August 2013: Vol. 217(2):270-79.

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2013 European Telemedicine Conference

telemedicine

2013 European Telemedicine Conference

29 – 30 October 2013, Edinburgh, UK.
Telemedicine is one of the fastest growing areas of innovation in healthcare to improve patient care, increase access and lower costs. It is a proven solution to many of the systemic problems in our existing healthcare system. To stay on top of the possibilities and abreast of the latest innovations in telemedicine, the first European Telemedicine Conference is a must attend event.

The first annual European Telemedicine Conference (ETC) combines the efforts of several leading European Healthcare Organisations into one powerful event. In 2013, the ETC incorporates the annual Scottish Centre for Telemedicine and Telecare Conference with the UPMC International Telemedicine Conference. This collaboration also draws on the strengths of its other partners to produce a vibrant local event with rich international appeal.

With speakers from USA, Spain, Norway, UK and more joining experts in telemedicine from Scotland, the conference promises to to deliver presentations covering all the major strategic issues of the day. The conference offers three tracks themed:

  • Living well with telehealthcare!
  • Telemedicine – From research and documentation to best practice.
  • Telemedicine – Experiences from the clinical reality.

This unique interactive area of the Conference offers delegates hands-on experiences of pipe-line products and the latest concepts in telemedicine.

Universities, SMEs and service providers will showcase new and emerging products in this field and attendees will be able to try out, touch and feel healthcare IT simulations.

Based on the successful “Dragon’s Den” BBC programme, the Innovation Hothouse will feature pitches by developers of their latest innovations to a panel of industry experts. The audience will decide upon the winning pitches and the winners will receive a special sponsorship “package” to assist in product development. There will be three sessions with pitches from:

  • Health and care public sector
  • Universities and R&D centers
  • Small to medium enterprise

The panel will be led by Roy Lilley, well respected entrepreneur, writer, broadcaster and commentator on health and social issues. He has, twice, been voted top UK speaker on NHS topics so these sessions promise to be both informative and entertaining.

For further information, please visit:
http://telemedicineconference.eu

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An increasing number of foreigners comes to Belgium to have a surgery carried out

surgery

An increasing number of foreigners comes to Belgium to have a surgery carried out. In four years’ time, their number climbed with 18 percent, although the most recent figures go back to 2010. It’s especially Dutch patients that find their way to Belgian hospitals.

In 2010, Belgian hospitals welcomed almost 46,400 patients from neighbouring countries, compared to some 39,300 in 2007. Dutch patients accounted for almost two thirds, their number totalling some 30,000. The explanation is simple. The Dutch come to Belgium to avoid long waiting lists in their home country. Joris Vanvinckenroye of Royal Doctors, a company specialised in finding out the best treatment and the shortest waiting times, says they mostly come for heart surgery, hip or knee operations or interventions to counter obesity.

This so-called medical tourism is often well coordinated. More Dutch health insurers are making contracts with Belgian hospitals. The Belgian Health Service has reassured Belgian patients, claiming that the influx of mainly Dutch patients will not have a negative effect on waiting times for Belgians.

http://www.deredactie.be/cm/vrtnieuws.english/Health%2Band%2BEnvironment/130806_medical_treatment_Belgium

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Doctors could be forced to carry out immigration checks on patients

patient check

Doctors could be forced to carry out immigration checks on patients

Uk- Doctors could be forced to carry out immigration checks on patients, documents show

Doctors and nurses could be forced to check the immigration status of patients to see if they can be charged, official documents have disclosed, despite a Government pledge that NHS staff will not become “border guards”.

Ministers earlier this month announced controversial plans to crack down on “health tourism” by making foreigners pay a £200 levy for NHS care. A consultation document released by the Department of Health makes clear that frontline NHS staff could “clearly have a role in identifying chargeable patients”. Despite assurances from Jeremy Hunt, the Health Secretary, that the new measures will not affect patient care, the consultation only makes it clear that doctors will not be “diverted wholesale” from looking after patients under the controversial plans.

Health campaigners last night warned that the scheme will be a “disaster” and could cause more scandals like those seen at the Mid Staffordshire and Morecambe Bay trusts, where thousands may have died needlessly. Under the plans, foreigners from outside the European Union applying for visas lasting more than six months will have to pay the new “health care levy”. They are currently entitled to free treatment.

Shorter-term visitors will also face charges for their treatment. There are additional plans to make it easier for the NHS to recover the cost of treating EU nationals and to help doctors identify those eligible for treatment. Nobody will be refused emergency care under the proposals. The 60-page consultation document states that clinicians “are often well placed to identify visitors who are chargeable”. It says that for the system to be adopted by the NHS, officials will have to ensure that “clinicians’ time must not be diverted wholesale from clinical matters”. The consultation adds that “the new system must not compromise the safe, efficient and cost-effective delivery of healthcare, particularly in critical front line services including Accident & Emergency and GP practices”. “Staff across the system will clearly have a role in identifying chargeable patients, but the rules and systems should be as straightforward as possible,” the document states. “Clinicians are not expected to take on the role of immigration officials, but they are often well placed to identify visitors who are chargeable. The process we design will need to ensure there is no conflict with their professional obligations.”

Mr Hunt this month said it was only right for immigrants to have to contribute towards the NHS, which costs taxpayers around £5,000 per family. Official figures show that about £33 million was spent last year on treating foreign nationals in hospital. About two thirds of this money was recovered. The Department of Health believes that less than half of overseas visitors are currently identified. The Health Secretary said that he wants “a system that is fair for the British taxpayer by ensuring that foreign nationals pay for their NHS treatment”.He added: “No one expects health workers to become immigration guards and we want to work alongside doctors to bring about improvements, but I’m clear we must all work together to protect the NHS from costly abuse.”

Julie Bailey, who set up the Cure The NHS group after her mother Bella died at Stafford Hospital in 2007, told the Telegraph “It would be a disaster. Doctors and nurses are trained to look after people – not to look at people’s immigration status. “We can not expect out doctors and nurses to do any more than they are doing already. “Whoever came up with this ridiculous idea needs to think again. It will lead to more scandals like Mid Staffs.” The British Medical Association warned that the proposals will “divert valuable time away from treating patients”. “NHS staff are already struggling to cope with rising patient demand and declining resources, especially in general practice and key hospital services like emergency care,” a spokesman said. “Asking them to undertake complicated vetting checks would place another burden on overstretched services and divert valuable time away from treating patients.” Dr Clare Gerada, chair of the Royal College of GPs, said: “We agree that the health service must not be abused and that we must bring an end to health tourism, but it is the role of GPs and their teams to care for patients, not to be an arm of the border agency checking people’s passports and collecting money at the till point.” And Jamie Reed, Labour’s Shadow Health Minister, added: “The NHS is not an International Health Service – but neither should it be a branch of the UK Border Agency. “Unfortunately, this Government has a habit of announcing policies that sound good but prove to be completely unworkable.”

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Sitting May Prompt Diabetes

The_Secret_of_healthy_sitting_by_Gernot_Steifensand

Sitting May Prompt Diabetes

Among women‚ being seated for long periods of time every day raises the risks of developing type–2 diabetes.

An emerging factor for chronic disease‚ sedentary behavior – marked by an obvious lack of routine physical activity‚ may prompt the onset of type–2 diabetes among women. Thomas Yates‚ from the University of Leicester (United Kingdom)‚ and colleagues assessed 585 men and women‚ ages 40 and over‚ for the amount of time they spend sitting during the course of the week. Additionally‚ the team collected blood samples to identify markers linked to diabetes and metabolic dysfunction. The researchers found that women who spent the longest time sitting have higher levels of insulin‚ as well as elevated levels of leptin (a chemical released by fatty tissue in the abdomen)‚ and higher amounts of inflammatory markers including C–reactive protein and interleukin–6. These correlations were not found in the male study subjects. Urging that women need to engage in 30 minutes of moderate to vigorous intensity exercise a day‚ the study authors conclude that: “Total self-reported weekday sitting time was associated with biomarkers linked to chronic low–grade inflammation and poor metabolic health in women … independent of physical activity.”
http://www.worldhealth.net/info/diabetes/?affcode=diabetes
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