Trusts criticised on elderly care

Whiston HospitalThe Care Quality Commission carried out 100 unannounced inspections
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Two NHS trusts have been criticised for failing to meet basic standards of care for the elderly.

The Care Quality Commission (CQC) is carrying out an England-wide review of care for older people in 100 hospitals.

The latest reports showed inspectors had “moderate concerns” about Whiston Hospital, part of the St Helens and Knowsley Teaching Hospitals NHS Trust.

They also criticised Barnsley Hospital NHS Foundation Trust in South Yorkshire.

The second batch of CQC reports included inspections at 14 hospitals.

The first batch of reports found doctors had to prescribe drinking water for patients at one NHS hospital because they were not given enough while others were left unfed.

In the reports, published on Thursday, Whiston Hospital was criticised for the way it fed elderly people, saying it had good practice on some wards but not others.

On one ward, people were helped to sit out of bed or sit up for eating, while on another ward this did not happen to the same level, inspectors said.

“The Trust remains committed to ensuring patients receive the highest standard of care”

St Helens and Knowsley Teaching Hospitals NHS Trust

Some patients missed a meal because they did not want what was offered.

It also said some people were helped with eating, but others had to wait more than half an hour to be helped.

A spokeswoman for St Helens and Knowsley said: “The Care Quality Commission report looked at some nursing practices on two wards and found no major concerns with the care provided.

“The report highlighted that patients’ privacy, dignity and independence were respected.

“The trust had already introduced measures to further meet the nutritional needs of patients and following this report has put into practice additional improvements.

“The trust remains committed to ensuring that patients receive the highest standard of care and an excellent experience.”

In Barnsley, inspectors found there were many examples of good practice, but not all patients who needed help with eating got it and staff were unsure which patients had specific needs.

At meal times, “none of the tables were cleaned before or after the meal and one patient had an empty urine bottle placed on their table alongside their meal during lunch”.

Juliette Greenwood, chief nurse at Barnsley Hospital, said: “It was disappointing to learn that our standards around the nutritional needs of patients during the spot checks were not as high as we expect them to be.

“I am very sorry to those patients we let down but want to assure them that our services are considered safe by the CQC and these spot checks do not reflect the overall care and treatment we provide.”

Two trusts were told to maintain their standards – St George’s Healthcare NHS Trust in south London and Sherwood Forest Hospitals NHS Foundation Trust.

The 10 trusts that met all the standards were: University College London Hospitals NHS Foundation Trust, Lewisham Healthcare NHS Trust, Heatherwood and Wexham Park Hospitals NHS Foundation Trust, Kettering General Hospital NHS Foundation Trust, Kingston Hospital NHS Trust, Taunton and Somerset NHS Foundation Trust, Nuffield Orthopaedic Centre NHS Trust, Calderdale and Huddersfield NHS Foundation Trust, North Middlesex University Hospital NHS Trust and York Hospitals NHS Foundation Trust.

This article is from the BBC News website. © British Broadcasting Corporation, The BBC is not responsible for the content of external internet sites.

Nature ‘is worth billions’ to UK

Richard BlackBy Richard Black

SwanUrban parks and their attractions are worth up to £300 per person each year, the NEA concludes
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The UK’s parks, lakes, forests and wildlife are worth billions of pounds to the economy, says a major report.

The health benefits of merely living close to a green space are worth up to £300 per person per year, it concludes.

The National Ecosystem Assessment (NEA) says that for decades, the emphasis has been on producing more food and other goods – but this has harmed other parts of nature that generate hidden wealth.

Ministers who commissioned the NEA will use it to re-shape planning policy.

“The natural world is vital to our existence, providing us with essentials such as food, water and clean air – but also cultural and health benefits not always fully appreciated because we get them for free,” said Environment Secretary Caroline Spelman.

“The UK NEA is a vital step forward in our ability to understand the true value of nature and how to sustain the benefits it gives us.”

The economic benefits of nature are seen most clearly in food production, which depends on organisms such as soil microbes, earthworms and pollinating insects.

If their health declines – as is currently happening in the UK with bees – either farmers produce less food, or have to spend more to produce the same amount.

Either way there is an economic impact; and on average, the costs are growing over time.

“Without the environment, we’re all dead – so the total value is infinite,”

Ian Bateman UEA

“Humans rely on the way ecosystems services control our climate – pollution, water quality, pollination – and we’re finding out that many of these regulating services are degrading,” said Bob Watson, chief scientific adviser to the Department for Environment, Food and Rural Affairs (Defra) and co-chairman of the NEA.

“About 30% of the key ecosystem services that we rely on are degrading.

“About 20% are getting better, however – our air quality has improved a lot – and what this report says is that we can do a lot better across the board,” he told BBC News.

The 1940s saw the beginning of a national drive to increase production of food and other products such as timber.

What are ‘ecosystem services’?

Tractor driving through a vineyard (Image: European Environment Agency)

The UN recognises four basic categories of ecosystem service that nature provides to humanity:Provisioning – providing timber, wheat, fish, etcRegulating – disposing of pollutants, regulating rainfall, storing carbonCultural – sacred sites, tourism, enjoyment of countrysideSupporting – maintaining soils and plant growthDollar trees line conservation road

Although that was successful, the NEA finds there was a price to pay – England, for example, has the smallest percentage of forest cover anywhere in Europe, while many fish stocks are below optimum levels.

The report says the problem arises largely because currently, only material products such as food carry a pricetag in the market.

By calculating the value of less tangible factors such as clean air, clean water and natural flood defences, it hopes to rebalance the equation.

The Royal Society for the Protection of Birds (RSPB) welcomed the assessment.

“The traditional view of economic growth is based on chasing GDP, but in fact we will all end up richer and happier if we begin to take into account the true value of nature,” said its conservation director, Martin Harper.

“Of course no-one can put a pounds and pence value on everything in nature – but equally we cannot ignore the importance of looking after it when we are striving for economic growth.”

The NEA seeks to include virtually every economic contribution from eight types of landscape, such as woodlands, coasts and urban areas.

It also provides some local flavours by looking at variations across the UK.

Some figures emerge with precision, such as the £430m that pollinating insects are calculated to be worth, or the £1.5bn pricetag on inland wetlands, valued so high because they help to produce clean water.

Other aspects of the evaluation are less precise because the costs and benefits are harder to quantify, and may change over time.

Ian Bateman, an economist from the University of East Anglia who played a principal role in the analysis, said that putting a single price on nature overall was not sensible.

ECOSYSTEMS ACROSS THE UK

Land in each nation broken down by ecosystem

Source: UK National Ecosystem Assessment

“Without the environment, we’re all dead – so the total value is infinite,” he said.

“What is important is the value of changes – of feasible, policy-relevant changes – and those you can put numbers on.”

The full 2,000-page report is stacked full of such numbers. The government intends to use some of them in its forthcoming Natural Environment White Paper and other initiatives that could reform urban and rural planning.

Professor Watson said this did not imply an end to development, but that costs and benefits of each proposed development could be assessed more accurately in advance.

“Urban green space, for example, is unbelievably important – if affects the value of houses, it affects our mental wellbeing.

“This report is saying ‘this has got incredible value, so before you start converting green space into building, think through what the economic value is of maintaining that green space’ – or the blue space, the ponds and the rivers.”

On the global stage, several countries have previously evaluated the economic worth of specific factors such as forests or fisheries.

And two international studies – the Millennium Ecosystem Assessment (MEA) and The Economics of Ecosystems and Biodiversity (Teeb) – have given broader views of society’s environmental trajectory, and the costs and benefits.

But the UK is the first nation to produce such a detailed assessment across the piece.

This article is from the BBC News website. © British Broadcasting Corporation, The BBC is not responsible for the content of external internet sites.

‘China hackers’ hit Google e-mail

Breaking news graphic

Hackers in China have compromised personal e-mail accounts of hundreds of top US officials, military personnel and journalists, Google has said.

The US company said a campaign to obtain passwords originated in China and was aimed at monitoring e-mail.

Google said its security was not breached but indicated passwords were obtained via fraud or from other sites.

Also targeted were Chinese political activists and officials in other Asian countries, Google said.

“Google detected and has disrupted this campaign to take users’ passwords and monitor their emails,” the company said on Wednesday.

“We have notified victims and secured their accounts. In addition, we have notified relevant government authorities.”

This article is from the BBC News website. © British Broadcasting Corporation, The BBC is not responsible for the content of external internet sites.

Public sector pay deals ‘at zero’

CashAcross the whole economy the median pay settlement is 2.5%, the research suggests

Public sector pay settlements were running at zero in the three months to April, for the first time since records began in the 1960s, research suggests.

The median pay settlement in the private sector rose to 3% from 2.5% in the three months to March, research group Incomes Data Services (IDS) said.

The public sector pay freeze was announced last year by the government as it tried to reduce the UK’s deficit.

The TUC said the government was making public sector workers a “scapegoat”.

The median figure is the one at which half of workers are getting a higher settlement and half are getting a lower one.

Bank of England policymakers will study the figures closely.

Some members have indicated that they are more likely to vote for a rise in interest rates if there is evidence that high inflation, currently at 4.5%, is leading to bigger wage increases.

IDS, which monitors annual pay settlements, said the increase in the private sector median reflected a rise in manufacturing pay awards.

“April is a key month for public sector pay reviews and the latest figures begin to show the effects of government policy on public sector pay,” IDS said.

But it added that the median for the whole economy remains at 2.5%, despite the addition of the freezes in the public sector.

TUC general secretary Brendan Barber said while it was encouraging to see private sector pay awards increase, they were still running significantly below inflation, and the public sector was still feeling the real pain.

“By forcing through pay cuts and seeking to increase pension contributions on top of heavy job losses, the government is making public servants the scapegoat for a financial crisis they played no part in causing,” he said.

This article is from the BBC News website. © British Broadcasting Corporation, The BBC is not responsible for the content of external internet sites.

‘Offshoring risk’ to council jobs

General view of Chamberlain Square in BirminghamService Birmingham says it remains committed to creating jobs in the city
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The Unite union is warning that thousands of council and local authority jobs could be at risk of being outsourced abroad.

It follows the news that dozens of Birmingham City Council staff are to see their jobs offshored to India.

Up to 100 posts are to be transferred by the end of the year.

The cost-cutting move is thought to be the first time a council or local authority has outsourced part of their direct workforce abroad.

The posts are with Service Birmingham, a joint venture between Birmingham City Council and the management firm Capita.

A redundancy notice has already been served which will see more than 70 Birmingham-based IT jobs go.

Service Birmingham began looking at offshoring in the autumn.

The first tranche will see 18 roles move to India. A further 37 will go by the end of the summer.

A total of 100 are likely to go by the end of the year.

Service Birmingham has confirmed that employees have already been recruited in the Indian city of Pune.

It is understood that they will shortly travel to the UK for a formal induction.

“Once these jobs go they will not come back”

Peter Allenson Unite

Offshoring jobs has become common in the IT and financial services sectors, but this is thought to be the first time a council has moved posts abroad.

The Local Government Association said it was not aware of any other local authorities who have outsourced any part of their direct workforce overseas.

“It is a matter for local authorities as individual employers to decide in consultation with their workforce,” said Sarah Messenger of the Local Government Employers organisation.

But the Unite union says it fears council workers here could be forced to train workers from overseas to do their jobs.

“This is an outrageous decision and Unite will fight tooth and nail to stop this Tory-led council from exporting these valuable jobs overseas,” Unite’s national officer Peter Allenson said.

“We fear that this could be just the beginning and other councils could follow suit.

“Thousands of public sector jobs could go. Once these jobs go they will not come back.”

Service Birmingham says it is on track to meet a jobs promise made in 2006 that will see more than 700 jobs created in the city by April 2013.

But a group spokesman also said: “We need to offer the council the best combination of operating models to deliver cost savings and efficiency gains while maintaining our existing service levels.

“We are talking about a limited number of back office technical roles. No customer-facing staff will be affected.”

The spokesman emphasised that this was just one element of the work that Service Birmingham does for the council, and said the group would work with trade union representatives.

“We remain absolutely committed to our Birmingham workforce,” he said.

This article is from the BBC News website. © British Broadcasting Corporation, The BBC is not responsible for the content of external internet sites.

UN Libya team accuses both sides

Rebel fighters in Misrata - 1 JuneThe rebels were also criticised in the report

UN investigators have accused government forces in Libya of war crimes and crimes against humanity.

Rights experts said they found evidence of crimes including murder and torture, in a pattern that suggested Libyan leader Muammar Gaddafi was behind them.

The UN mission also said opposition forces were guilty of abuses which would constitute war crimes, although they were not as numerous.

Earlier Nato extended its mission in Libya by a further 90 days.

Nato is enforcing a UN resolution to protect civilians in Libya amid a two-month revolt inspired by other uprisings in the Arab world.

The UN report, which has just been released in Geneva, was carried out by a team of three human rights experts.

The team travelled to Libya to carry out the investigation, and met both sides in the conflict, as well as human rights groups and medical professionals, and families of those detained.

The report will be debated by the UN human rights council in Geneva on Monday.

This article is from the BBC News website. © British Broadcasting Corporation, The BBC is not responsible for the content of external internet sites.

Fear ‘worsens’ cardiac outcome

Patient in cardiac intensive care - file photoSome patients express a fear of dying during a heart attack
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People with an intense fear of dying during a heart attack could suffer a worse outcome, research suggests.

London-led researchers asked 208 patients to rate their levels of fear following a severe cardiac event.

People who reported they were most distressed during an attack had higher levels of chemical markers – linked to inflammation – in their blood.

Writing in the European Heart Journal, the authors say heightened inflammation may lead to poorer long-term health.

“This study suggests that people who are most distressed during a heart attack have higher levels of particular chemical markers in their blood”

Dr Mike Knapton British Heart Foundation

“Large inflammatory responses are known to be damaging to the heart, and to increase the risk of longer-term cardiac problems such as having another heart attack, ” said British Heart Foundation professor of psychology, Andrew Steptoe.

The research, led by a team at Imperial College, found that patients who reported an intense fear of dying had raised levels of TNF alpha – a marker that has been linked to inflammatory processes in the body.

They also measured heart rate variability and the stress hormone cortisol, three weeks after the event.

Professor Steptoe, who worked on the study, said: “Fear of dying is not just an emotional response, but is linked into the biological changes that go on during acute cardiac events.

“This is an observational study, so we do not know whether helping people overcome their fears would improve the clinical outlook.”

Dr Mike Knapton, associate medical director at the British Heart Foundation, said: “This study suggests that people who are most distressed during a heart attack have higher levels of particular chemical markers in their blood, which are associated with greater inflammation in the body.

“Inflammation has previously been linked with an increased risk of heart attack but we don’t yet fully understand why.

“What we need to know now is whether we can allay people’s fears at the time of a heart attack and whether this actually translates into better outcomes in the long term.”

This article is from the BBC News website. © British Broadcasting Corporation, The BBC is not responsible for the content of external internet sites.

Syrian inquiry into boy’s death

An image grab taken from YouTube on May 28, 2011 showing a protester holding a picture of Hamza al-KhatibHamza al-Khatib’s death has given the protests a new focus

The Syrian authorities have announced a full inquiry into the death of a 13-year-old boy who has become a symbol for the continuing uprising against President Bashar al-Assad.

Opposition activists say the boy, Hamza al-Khatib, was abducted and tortured to death by security forces.

The authorities insist he was shot dead during a demonstration.

Meanwhile a UK-based rights group says more than 500 political prisoners have been released.

Rami Abdul-Rahman, director of the Syrian Observatory for Human Rights, said that among those freed were people arrested for taking part in anti-government protests.

Announcing an amnesty on Tuesday, Syrian state TV said it would cover members of the banned Muslim Brotherhood, which led an uprising against Mr Assad’s father Hafez in 1982.

Hamza al-Khatib is being compared to the Tunisian market-seller Mohamed Bouazizi and Iranian pro-democracy protester Neda Agha Soltan whose deaths galvanised anti-government campaigns.

He is also being called a martyr by the Syrian authorities.

Hamza went missing after a demonstration at an army barracks near Deraa in the south at the end of April.

Activists say he was captured and tortured to death, and that his mutilated body was handed back to his family four weeks later.

President Assad meeting officials - Sana news agency handout photo released 1 JuneThe Syrian authorities are trying to minimize damage caused by the boy’s death

The government says he received three fatal gunshot wounds during the protest and died on the spot, but there was a delay in handing over his body because he was not identified.

Syrian state TV aired a programme about the teenager on Tuesday night in which a judge said death was due to “a number of bullet wounds without any indication of torture or beating on the body”.

Coroner Akram al-Shaar blamed the state of the body on decomposition, adding: “There are no marks on the surface of the body that show violence, resistance or torture.”

State TV said the teenager’s father and family were invited to meet President Assad, and they were quoted as saying he “engulfed us with his kindness and graciousness”.

A man who identified himself as Hamza’s father said: “The president considered Hamza his own son and was deeply affected.”

But the BBC’s Jim Muir in neighbouring Lebanon says the authorities’ efforts have not stopped Hamza’s death giving a new focus to the continuing revolt.

It has also given ammunition to critics of the regime, he adds.

US Secretary of State Hillary Clinton said she hoped the death would persuade Syria to begin a transition to real democracy.

Australian Foreign Minister Kevin Rudd said such incidents had robbed Mr Assad of any legitimacy and urged the the UN Security Council to refer him to the International Criminal Court.

Human Rights Watch (HRW) published a report on Wednesday that said “systematic killings and torture by Syrian security forces” in Deraa could qualify as crimes against humanity.

Activists say more than 1,000 people have died in weeks of protests.

This article is from the BBC News website. © British Broadcasting Corporation, The BBC is not responsible for the content of external internet sites.

VIDEO: Fifa vote: ‘Blink and you will miss it’

Fifa President Sepp Blatter was voted in for a fourth term in office, following a lengthy electoral procedure at the organisation’s congress.

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Man injured in quad bike accident

A 55-year-old man is in a critical condition in hospital following an accident on a quad bike.

It happened on the Ballyroney Road in Rathfriland, County Down on Wednesday.

Police said the road is now closed between Island Bog Road and Iveagh Park Road.

There are no further details.

This article is from the BBC News website. © British Broadcasting Corporation, The BBC is not responsible for the content of external internet sites.

Tesco mistake leads to beer rush

An error which slashed the price of beer and cider led to a stampede of customers at a number of Tesco supermarkets in Scotland.

A deal offering three boxes of various alcoholic drinks for £20 was going through the tills at three for £11.

Police were called to Tesco in Greenock after heavy congestion was reported in the car park as customers rushed to get the deal.

A spokesman for Tesco said the pricing error was quickly spotted.

He said till operators changed the prices manually until the system was corrected.

It is understood the offer was supposed to be “buy three boxes of beer and save £11”.

Instead customers were able to purchase up to 45 small bottles of lager or 36 cans for £11.

News of the error spread quickly from about 1900 BST, with many people posting messages on social networking sites.

Twitter user Graham McKenzie tweeted: “Price glitch for beer has literally caused a stampede at the local Tesco. Tempers are flying in car park.”

Rebecca Macdougall tweeted: “Was casually chatting to my dad about the beer situation at Tesco mention 3 crates for 11 quid and he sprints to the car.”

This article is from the BBC News website. © British Broadcasting Corporation, The BBC is not responsible for the content of external internet sites.

VIDEO: Life for residents in war-torn Misrata

Misrata has been visited by Bernard Henry Levy, the man credited with persuading Nicolas Sarkozy to join the air offensive against Gaddafi’s forces.

This article is from the BBC News website. © British Broadcasting Corporation, The BBC is not responsible for the content of external internet sites.