Universal personalised care: implementing the comprehensive model

NHS England, February 2019
Personalised Care will benefit up to 2.5 million people by 2024, giving them the same choice and control over their mental and physical health that they have come to expect in every other aspect of their life. This document confirms how personalised care will be rolled out across England by 2023/24.
Click here to view the document.

Polypharmacy: getting our medicines right

Royal Pharmaceutical Society, February 2019
This guidance is for pharmacists and all healthcare organisations involved with medicine and provides a summary of the scale and complexity of the issue of polypharmacy. The guidance outlines how healthcare professionals, patients and carers can find solutions when polypharmacy causes problems for patients and points to useful resources that can help.  The guidance recommends that all healthcare organisations have systems in place to ensure people taking 10 or more medicines can be identified and highlighted as requiring a comprehensive medication review with a pharmacist.
Click here to view the guidance.

British Journal of Mental Health Nursing – February 2019

The February edition of British Journal of Mental Health Nursing has been published.  This issue includes articles on boundary violations between nurses and patients, attention deficit hyperactivity disorder in adults and the role of the mental health nurse, and positive psychology.
Click here to view the table of contents.
Click here to request an article from the Library.

British Journal of Healthcare Assistants – February 2019

The February edition of British Journal of Healthcare Assistants has been published.  This issue includes articles on an improvement resource for the deployment of nursing associates in secondary care, skin cancer, and the role of the maternity support worker in infection control.
Click here to view the table of contents.
Click here to request an article from the Library.

Juggling work and unpaid care: a growing issue

Carers UK, February 2019
The report finds that 2.6 million people in the UK have quit their job to care for a loved one who is older, disabled or seriously ill, with nearly half a million (468,000) leaving their job in the last two years alone.  The report findings also show that more people are caring than previously thought, with almost 5 million workers now juggling their paid job with caring – a dramatic rise compared with Census 2011 figures of 3 million.  The report recommends that employers support staff with caring responsibilities to stay in the workforce through flexible working arrangements and increased Carers’ leave.
Click here to view the full report.
 

Preparing the healthcare workforce to deliver the digital future

Health Education England, February 2019
This is the report of the findings of the Topol Review, led by Dr Eric Topol.  The review explored how to prepare the healthcare workforce, through education and training, to deliver the digital future.  The report looks at how technological and other developments are likely to change the roles and functions of clinical staff, and investigates the skills that will be needed for these roles and how health education will need to adapt to facilitate this.
Click here to view the full report.

Impact of social media and screen-use on young people’s health

The House of Commons Select Science and Technology Committee, January 2019
This report provides the findings of an inquiry examining whether the growing use of social media, and screens, among children is healthy or harmful.  It looks at the evidence base for such claims, and whether any new measures or controls are required.  The report highlights the benefits of social media, while also revealing the potential risks children face when accessing social media, and suggests what can be done to protect young users when they are online.
Click here to view the full report.

The next generation: how intergenerational interaction improves life chances of children and young people

United for All Ages, January 2019
This report looks at how intergenerational interaction can have benefits for children and young people who currently face a growing crisis of confidence, loneliness and anxiety, often fearful about the future, fragmented families, segregated by age, with cuts in services and financial support.  The report finds that interaction between older and younger people can help address these issues – starting at an early age with nurseries and care homes linking, through schools, colleges and universities, to mentoring and community projects.

Click here to view the full report.