Trust Name Site Principal Investigator RM / Coordinator Airedale NHS
Total Page:16
File Type:pdf, Size:1020Kb
Load more
Recommended publications
-
Quarter 7 Duplicate Removal Process
Quarter 7 Duplicate Removal Process Guidance Total number of records submitted via the web tool (ie Stroke / All records (of any diagnosis) for patients who arrived at hospital TIA / Other) between 1 October 2012 and 31 December 2013 which were locked on the SINAP web tool by 21 January 2013. Number of stroke records submitted via the web tool As above, except that stroke was the diagnosis (as opposed to TIA/Other). Total number of records after cleaning (ie duplicate removals) Records assumed to be duplicates are those that have all of the following fields identical: hospital, date of patient arrival at hospital, gender, age and diagnosis. This may mean that some records that were not real duplicates are removed, but this is proportionally only a small number of those removed, whereas the vast majority will be duplicates. This has been identified as the most appropriate method for removing duplicate records. Percentage of records submitted included after cleaning The percentage represents the proportion of records included in the quarter 7 report after the data cleaning process, this is listed below as total records and stroke records. Total Percentage Percentage Stroke Stroke Total number of number of of stroke of all records records records records submitted records records submitted submitted included SHA Trust Hospital via the webtool in included submitted included in via the after Quarter 7 after included in Quarter 7 webtool in cleaning (Stroke/TIA/Other) cleaning Quarter 7 Report Quarter 7 Quarter 7 Quarter 7 Report East Chesterfield -
Emergency Department Activity
NHS Scotland - Emergency Department Activity Attendances and Performance against the 4-hour Waiting Time Standard This is an ISD Scotland National Statistics release. The Scottish Government waiting time standard for emergency departments is that 98 % of all attendances should be seen within 4 hours. The figures presented in these tables detail the performance of each individual site and NHS board against the standard. Time Period: Apr-10 to Mar-11 Source: A&E data mart, ISD Scotland Date: 07 May 2012 List of Tables Table 1: Attendances and performance against 4-hour standard, Apr-10 to Mar-11 Total attendances, number of attendances breaching standard and attendances meeting standard (number and percentage). Figures are given at site and NHS Board level. Table 2: Attendances, Apr-10 to Mar-11 Summary table of attendances only. Figures are given at site and NHS Board level. Table 3: Performance against 4-hour standard, Apr-10 to Mar-11 Summary table of percentage of attendances meeting standard. Figures are given at site and NHS Board level. Notes: 1) The waiting time is defined as the time of arrival until the time of discharge, admission or transfer. 2) New presentations only; excludes planned return and recall attendances. 3) There are two types of site that provide emergency care; • ED - Emergency Departments; sites that provide a 24 hour emergency medicine consultant led service • MIU/Other - sites including minor injuries units (MIU), small hospitals and health centres in rural areas that carry out emergency department related activity and are GP or Nurse led. They may or may not be open 24 hours. -
International Genome-Wide Meta-Analysis Identifies New Primary Biliary Cirrhosis Risk Loci and Targetable Pathogenic Pathways
Cordell H, Han Y, Mells G, Li Y, Hirschfield GM, Greene CS, Xie G, Juran BD, Zhu D, Qian DC, Floyd JAB, Morley KI, Prati D, Lleo A, Cusi D, Canadian-US PBC Consortium, Italian PBC Genetics Study Group, UK-PBC Consortium, Gershwin ME, Anderson CA, Lazaridis KN, Invernizzi P, Seldin MF, Sandford RN, Amos CI, Siminovitch K. International genome-wide meta-analysis identifies new primary biliary cirrhosis risk loci and targetable pathogenic pathways. Nature Communications 2015, 6: 8019. Copyright: © 2015 Macmillan Publishers Limited. This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License. The images or other third party material in this article are included in the article’s Creative Commons license, unless indicated otherwise in the credit line; if the material is not included under the Creative Commons license, users will need to obtain permission from the license holder to reproduce the material. To view a copy of this license, visit http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ DOI link to article: http://dx.doi.org/10.1038/ncomms9019 Date deposited: 01/10/2015 This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License Newcastle University ePrints - eprint.ncl.ac.uk ARTICLE Received 30 Jan 2015 | Accepted 3 Jul 2015 | Published 22 Sep 2015 DOI: 10.1038/ncomms9019 OPEN International genome-wide meta-analysis identifies new primary biliary cirrhosis risk loci and targetable pathogenic pathways Heather J. Cordell1, Younghun Han2, George F. Mells3, Yafang Li2, Gideon M. Hirschfield4, Casey S. Greene5, Gang Xie6, Brian D. Juran7, Dakai Zhu2, David C. Qian2, James A.B. -
Full Business Case for the Merger of Colchester Hospital University NHS Foundation Trust and the Ipswich Hospital NHS Trust
Full Business Case for the merger of Colchester Hospital University NHS Foundation Trust and The Ipswich Hospital NHS Trust 22 March 2018 Final Draft Version – Prepared for Trust Board 29 March 2018 Colchester Hospital University NHS Foundation Trust and The Ipswich Hospital NHS Trust Merger Full Business Case 2 | P a g e Colchester Hospital University NHS Foundation Trust and The Ipswich Hospital NHS Trust Merger Full Business Case Contents Contents .................................................................................................................................................. 3 Abbreviations .......................................................................................................................................... 7 1 Executive Summary ......................................................................................................................... 9 1.1 Introduction ............................................................................................................................ 9 1.2 Background ............................................................................................................................. 9 1.3 The case for change ................................................................................................................ 9 1.4 Benefits of merging ............................................................................................................... 10 1.5 The ESNEFT mission, vision and philosophy ........................................................................ -
Medical Students in England and France, 1815-1858
FLORENT PALLUAULT D.E.A., archiviste paléographe MEDICAL STUDENTS IN ENGLAND AND FRANCE 1815-1858 A COMPARATIVE STUDY University of Oxford Faculty of Modern History - History of Science Thesis submitted for the degree of Doctor in Philosophy Trinity 2003 ACKNOWLEDGMENTS In the first instance, my most sincere gratitude goes to Dr Ruth Harris and Dr Margaret Pelling who have supervised this thesis. Despite my slow progress, they have supported my efforts and believed in my capacities to carry out this comparative study. I hope that, despite its defects, it will prove worthy of their trust. I would like to thank Louella Vaughan for providing an interesting eighteenth-century perspective on English medical education, sharing her ideas on my subject and removing some of my misconceptions. Similarly, I thank Christelle Rabier for her support and for our discussions regarding her forthcoming thesis on surgery in England and France. My thanks naturally go to the staff of the various establishments in which my research has taken me, and particularly to the librarians at the Wellcome Library for the History and Understanding of Medicine in London, the librarians in the History of Science Room at the Bibliothèque nationale de France in Paris, and to Bernadette Molitor and Henry Ferreira-Lopes at the Bibliothèque Inter-Universitaire de Médecine in Paris. I am grateful to Patricia Gillet from the Association d’entraide des Anciens élèves de l’École des Chartes for the financial support that the Association has given me and to Wes Cordeau at Texas Supreme Mortgage, Inc. for the scholarship that his company awarded me. -
Pacman TEMPLATE
Updated May 2020 National Cardiac Arrest Audit Participating Hospitals The total number of hospitals signed up to participate in NCAA is 194. England Birmingham and Black Country Participant Alexandra Hospital Worcestershire Acute Hospitals NHS Trust Birmingham Heartlands Hospital University Hospital Birmingham NHS Foundation Trust City Hospital Sandwell and West Birmingham Hospitals NHS Trust Good Hope Hospital University Hospital Birmingham NHS Foundation Trust Hereford County Hospital Wye Valley NHS Trust Manor Hospital Walsall Healthcare NHS Trust New Cross Hospital The Royal Wolverhampton Hospitals NHS Trust Russells Hall Hospital The Dudley Group of Hospitals NHS Trust Sandwell General Hospital Sandwell and West Birmingham Hospitals NHS Trust Solihull Hospital University Hospital Birmingham NHS Foundation Trust Queen Elizabeth Hospital, Birmingham University Hospital Birmingham NHS Foundation Trust Worcestershire Royal Hospital Worcestershire Acute Hospitals NHS Trust Central England Participant George Eliot Hospital George Eliot Hospital NHS Trust Glenfield Hospital University Hospitals of Leicester NHS Trust Kettering General Hospital Kettering General Hospital NHS Foundation Trust Leicester General Hospital University Hospitals of Leicester NHS Trust Leicester Royal Infirmary University Hospitals of Leicester NHS Trust Northampton General Hospital Northampton General Hospital NHS Trust Hospital of St Cross, Rugby University Hospitals Coventry and Warwickshire NHS Trust University Hospital Coventry University Hospitals Coventry -
Mental Health Bed Census
Scottish Government One Day Audit of Inpatient Bed Use Definitions for Data Recording VERSION 2.4 – 10.11.14 Data Collection Documentation Document Type: Guidance Notes Collections: 1. Mental Health and Learning Disability Bed Census: One Day Audit 2. Mental Health and Learning Disability Patients: Out of Scotland and Out of NHS Placements SG deadline: 30th November 2014 Coverage: Census date: Midnight, 29th Oct 2014 Page 1 – 10 Nov 2014 Scottish Government One Day Audit of Inpatient Bed Use Definitions for Data Recording VERSION 2.4 – 10.11.14 Document Details Issue History Version Status Authors Issue Date Issued To Comments / changes 1.0 Draft Moira Connolly, NHS Boards Beth Hamilton, Claire Gordon, Ellen Lynch 1.14 Draft Beth Hamilton, Ellen Lynch, John Mitchell, Moira Connolly, Claire Gordon, 2.0 Final Beth Hamilton, 19th Sept 2014 NHS Boards, Ellen Lynch, Scottish John Mitchell, Government Moira Connolly, website Claire Gordon, 2.1 Final Ellen Lynch 9th Oct 2014 NHS Boards, Further clarification included for the following data items:: Scottish Government Patient names (applicable for both censuses) website ProcXed.Net will convert to BLOCK CAPITALS, NHS Boards do not have to do this in advance. Other diagnosis (applicable for both censuses) If free text is being used then separate each health condition with a comma. Mental Health and Learning Disability Bed Census o Data item: Mental Health/Learning Disability diagnosis on admission Can use full description option or ICD10 code only option. o Data item: Last known Mental Health/Learning Disability diagnosis Can use full description option or ICD10 code only option. -
RCPCH Membership Data East of England Area
700 600 Consultant 500 ST1 - 4 + Fys 400 ST5 - 8 + staff grade 300 Retired 200 Medical student 100 Academic 0 GP Age Position Leicester Royal Infirmary Queen's Medical Centre Addenbrookes Hospital Nottingham University Hospitals NHS Trust Cambridge University Hospitals NHS Foundation Trust Norfolk & Norwich University Hospital Lister Hospital Luton and Dunstable Hospital NHS Foundation Trust Queen's Hospital Nottingham City Hospital Peterborough City Hospital Watford General Hospital Northampton General Hospital Royal Derby Hospital Location with most members Basildon and Thurrock University Hospitals NHS Foundation Trust All locations Princess Alexandra Hospital Lincoln County Hospital Luton & Dunstable Hospital Norfolk and Norwich University Hospital NHS Trust Southend University Hospital NHS Foundation Trust Broomfield Hospital Colchester General Hospital University Hospitals Of Leicester NHS Trust The Queen Elizabeth Hospital Chesterfield Royal Hospital NHS Foundation Trust Derbyshire Children's Hospital West Suffolk Hospital NHS Trust Northampton General Hospital NHS Trust Pilgrim Hospital University of Cambridge Kings Mill Hospital University of Nottingham Hinchingbrooke Hospital Kettering General Hospital Southend Hospital University of Leicester Barking, Havering and Redbridge Hospitals NHS Trust Glenfield Hospital Sherwood Forest Hospitals NHS Foundation Trust Ipswich Hospital Queen Elizabeth II Hospital West Suffolk Hospital Chesterfield Royal Hospital Queen's Hospital Basildon Hospital Bedford Hospital Ipswich Hospital NHS -
Transforming Our Research Base, Collaborative Projects Showcase
#TCNPlus TRANSFORMING OUR RESEARCH BASE: COLLABORATIVE PROJECTS SHOWCASE FERGUS HARRADENCE Deputy Director, Construction, Department for Business, Energy & Industrial Strategy ALISON NICHOLL Head of Constructing Excellence, BRE ##TCNPlusTCNPlus PUTTING PEOPLE AT THE HEART OF FUTURE SOCIAL HOUSING DESIGN AND MANUFACTURE DR HUDA DAWOOD Senior Research Associate, Teesside University PROFESSOR PAUL VAN SCHAIK Professor of Psychology, Teesside University ##TCNPlusTCNPlus THE PROBLEM • Social-housing occupants have limited choice over their living environment • Social-housing providers focus on low cost • User experience is not systematically addressed in social-housing design Existing work on requirements and design takes a technology-driven ‘deficit approach’: fixing problems rather than fulfilling human needs • Occupants’ quality of living environment may be compromised v The project addresses the lack of a systematic and theoretical approach to incorporating user experience (UX) research, tools and models to support social housing design • Social-housing occupants are more likely to experience fuel poverty v The project also focuses on occupants’ understanding and experience of energy systems #TCNPlus THE PLAN 1. Conduct a systematic literature review to identify design parameters that are relevant for housing and influence occupants’ UX 2. Conduct a systematic literature review to identify occupants’ user needs, convert these into requirements and establish their relevance 3. Develop a theoretical design matrix as a basis for subsequent -
Pacman TEMPLATE
Updated October 2019 National Cardiac Arrest Audit Participating Hospitals The total number of hospitals signed up to participate in NCAA is 194. England Birmingham and Black Country Non-participant New Cross Hospital The Royal Wolverhampton Hospitals NHS Trust Queen Elizabeth Hospital, Birmingham University Hospital Birmingham NHS Foundation Trust Participant Alexandra Hospital Worcestershire Acute Hospitals NHS Trust Birmingham Heartlands Hospital University Hospital Birmingham NHS Foundation Trust City Hospital Sandwell and West Birmingham Hospitals NHS Trust Good Hope Hospital University Hospital Birmingham NHS Foundation Trust Hereford County Hospital Wye Valley NHS Trust Manor Hospital Walsall Healthcare NHS Trust Russells Hall Hospital The Dudley Group of Hospitals NHS Trust Sandwell General Hospital Sandwell and West Birmingham Hospitals NHS Trust Solihull Hospital University Hospital Birmingham NHS Foundation Trust Worcestershire Royal Hospital Worcestershire Acute Hospitals NHS Trust Central England Participant George Eliot Hospital George Eliot Hospital NHS Trust Glenfield Hospital University Hospitals of Leicester NHS Trust Kettering General Hospital Kettering General Hospital NHS Foundation Trust Leicester General Hospital University Hospitals of Leicester NHS Trust Leicester Royal Infirmary University Hospitals of Leicester NHS Trust Northampton General Hospital Northampton General Hospital NHS Trust Hospital of St Cross, Rugby University Hospitals Coventry and Warwickshire NHS Trust University Hospital Coventry University -
The Angus Care Model
THE ANGUS CARE MODEL Let’s keep the conversation going Thank you for your interest in the development of the Angus Care Model. During week beginning 16 October 2017 people from across Angus attended drop-in information sessions held in Forfar, Carnoustie, Montrose and Arbroath. These events gave locals the chance to talk to health and social care professionals. Our conversations focused on the challenges facing services, the opportunities for change and how we can together build a future Angus Care Model that provides the best possible care to the most people possible. The majority of people (85%) who attended the meetings found them helpful and informative. Whilst a small number of people commented that they would have preferred a formal meeting, people (94%) overwhelmingly felt that they had been given an opportunity to comment and offer their opinion. When arranging future meetings we will take account of people's suggestions and improve the way we raise awareness about the meetings. We were asked to share the information that was on display. In addition to talking to staff and have many of their questions answered, we also invited people to write down questions and leave comments. We have done our best to answer as many of the questions as possible. Please take some time to consider the information contained below and get involved in the conversation by completing a short survey https://www.surveymonkey.co.uk/r/WDFV53D or by contacting us on [email protected] We look forward to continuing our conversation with you in the very near future. -
Epidemiology of Visual Impairment, Sight-Threatening Or Treatment-Requiring Diabetic Eye Disease in Children and Young People in the UK: Findings from DECS
1 Title page Title: Epidemiology of visual impairment, sight-threatening or treatment-requiring diabetic eye disease in children and young people in the UK: findings from DECS. Authors: Maria C Ibanez-Bruron MD, PhD1,2,3; Ameenat L Solebo PhD, FRCOphth1,2,4,5,6; Phillippa M. Cumberland MSc1,2, Jugnoo S Rahi PhD, FRCOphth1,2,4,5,6, on behalf of the Diabetic Eye Disease in Childhood Study (DECS) group. Affiliations: 1 Great Ormond Street Institute of Child Health, University College London, London, UK 2 Ulverscroft Vision Research Group, London, UK 3 Department of Ophthalmology, Pontificia Universidad Católica de Chile, Santiago, Chile 4 Great Ormond Street Hospital for Children NHS Foundation Trust, London, UK 5 Moorfields NIHR Biomedical Research Centre, London, UK 6 Institute of Ophthalmology, University College London, London, UK. Corresponding author: Professor Jugnoo Sangeeta Rahi, PhD, FRCOphth. GOS Institute of Child Health UCL, 30 Guildford Street, London, WC1N 1EH. Tel: 020 7905 2250; email: [email protected] ORCiD: 0000-0002-5718-9209 Word count: 3134 Financial Support: This work was funded by the Ulverscroft Foundation, the Diabetes Research & Wellness Foundation. Maria Ibanez-Bruron is also funded by National Commission for Scientific and Technological Research in Chile (CONICYT). AL Solebo 2 received support from the National Institute for Health Research Biomedical Research Centre (NIHR BRC) based at Moorfields Eye Hospital NHS Foundation Trust and UCL Institute of Ophthalmology, and is funded by an NIHR Clinician Scientist award. JS Rahi receives support from the NIHR BRC based at Moorfields Eye Hospital NHS Foundation Trust and UCL Institute of Ophthalmology, and is also supported by an NIHR Senior Investigator award.