-
Recent Posts
- Dementia-Friendly Communities Provision, Viewed as a Social Determinant of Health (JGCR / NHS England / WHO)
- International Perspectives on the Possible Impact of the COVID-19 Pandemic and Lockdown on Abuse of the Elderly (JGCR / American Journal of Geriatric Psychiatry / JAGS)
- Updates Relating to the Lancet Commission on Dementia Prevention, Intervention, and Care (Lancet / Alzheimer’s Research and Therapy / Alzheimer’s and Dementia)
- A Brief Review of How the COVID-19 Pandemic Relates to Elderly Care and Research (JGCR)
- Some Speculated / Potential Benefits of COVID-19 (JGCR / BBC Radio 4’s Rethink / BGS)
Archives
- September 2020
- August 2020
- June 2020
- April 2020
- March 2020
- February 2020
- January 2020
- December 2019
- November 2019
- October 2019
- September 2019
- August 2019
- July 2019
- June 2019
- May 2019
- April 2019
- March 2019
- February 2019
- January 2019
- December 2018
- November 2018
- October 2018
- September 2018
- August 2018
- July 2018
- June 2018
- May 2018
- April 2018
- March 2018
- February 2018
- January 2018
- December 2017
- November 2017
- October 2017
- September 2017
- August 2017
- July 2017
- June 2017
- May 2017
- April 2017
- March 2017
- February 2017
- January 2017
- December 2016
- November 2016
- October 2016
- September 2016
- August 2016
- July 2016
- June 2016
- May 2016
- April 2016
- March 2016
- February 2016
- January 2016
- December 2015
- November 2015
- October 2015
- September 2015
- August 2015
- July 2015
- June 2015
- May 2015
- April 2015
- March 2015
- February 2015
- January 2015
- December 2014
- November 2014
- October 2014
- September 2014
- August 2014
- July 2014
- June 2014
- May 2014
- April 2014
- March 2014
- February 2014
- January 2014
- December 2013
- November 2013
- October 2013
- September 2013
- August 2013
- July 2013
- June 2013
- May 2013
- April 2013
- March 2013
- February 2013
- January 2013
- December 2012
- November 2012
- October 2012
- September 2012
- August 2012
- July 2012
- June 2012
- May 2012
- April 2012
- March 2012
- February 2012
- January 2012
- December 2011
- November 2011
- October 2011
- September 2011
- August 2011
- July 2011
- June 2011
- May 2011
- April 2011
- March 2011
- February 2011
- January 2011
- December 2010
- November 2010
Categories
- Antipsychotics
- Assistive Technology
- Charitable Bodies
- Commissioning
- Delirium
- Depression
- Enhancing the Healing Environment
- Falls
- Falls Prevention
- Guidelines
- Hip Fractures
- Housing
- Hypertension
- In the News
- Integrated Care
- International
- Local Interest
- Mental Health
- Models of Dementia Care
- National
- ADASS
- All-Party Parliamentary Group (APPG) on Dementia
- BSI
- CQC: Care Quality Commission
- Department of Health
- Department of Health and Social Care (DHSC)
- Health Education England (HEE)
- Housing LIN
- MAGDR
- Mental Health Foundation
- Mental Health Network (NHS Confederation)
- MHP Health Mandate
- National Audit Office
- National Voices
- NEoLCIN
- NEoLCP
- NHS
- NHS Alliance
- NHS Confederation
- NHS Employers
- NHS England
- NHS Evidence
- NHS Improvement
- NICE Guidelines
- NIHR
- NIHRSDO
- Northern Ireland
- Patients Association
- Public Health England
- RCN
- Royal College of Physicians
- Royal College of Psychiatrists
- SCIE
- Scotland
- UK
- UK NSC
- Wales
- Non-Pharmacological Treatments
- Nutrition
- Pain
- Parkinson's Disease
- Patient Care Pathway
- Person-Centred Care
- Personalisation
- Pharmacological Treatments
- Proposed for Next Newsletter
- Quick Insights
- Standards
- Statistics
- Stroke
- Systematic Reviews
- Telecare
- Telehealth
- Universal Interest
Google Translate (100+ Languages)
Tag Archives: Interventions to Increase Patient Activation
Cognitive Health In Older Adults: Changing Unhealthy Lifestyles and Reducing Risk Factors (PHE)
Summary Public Health England (PHE) and the Cambridge Institute of Public Health have produced a summary of reviews which offer evidence to support the commissioning of interventions concerning a range of modifiable lifestyle risk factors / unhealthy behaviours in older … Continue reading →
Posted in Commissioning, Community Care, For Doctors (mostly), For Nurses and Therapists (mostly), For Researchers (mostly), For Social Workers (mostly), Housing, Integrated Care, Local Interest, Management of Condition, Mental Health, Models of Dementia Care, National, Non-Pharmacological Treatments, Nutrition, Person-Centred Care, Public Health England, Quick Insights, Statistics, Systematic Reviews, UK, Universal Interest
|
Tagged Active Ageing, Agewell Trial, Alcohol, Alcohol and Drug Consumption, Alcohol Misuse, Barriers and Facilitators in Lifestyle Changes (Agewell Trial), Behaviour Change Opportunities, Behavioural Risk Factors, Behavioural Risk Factors and Dementia, Blackfriars Consensus Statement, Cambridge Institute of Public Health, Cambridge Institute of Public Health: University of Cambridge, Cardiovascular Disease, Cardiovascular Disease (CVD), Cardiovascular Risk Factors, Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC), Chronic Obstructive Pulmonary Disease (COPD), Cognitive Behavioural Therapy (CBT), Cognitive Health In Older Adults, Cognitive Impairment (Potential Risk Factors), Cognitive Stimulation, Cognitive Training, Community Volunteering, Community-Based Volunteering, Culture and Behaviour Change, Dementia Risk Factors, Dementia Risk Prevention, Dementia Risk Reduction, Dementia Risk Reduction and Prevention, Dementia-Friendly Communities, Department of Public Health and Primary Care: Cambridge Institute of Public Health, Depression, Determinants of Health, Diabetes Epidemic, Diet, Diet and Dementia, Diet and Exercise, Dietary Interventions, Dietary Recommendations, Dietary Risk Factors, Diseases and Medical Conditions Associated With Dementia Risk, Education and Awareness, Encouraging Healthy Behaviour, Environmental Risk Factors, Epidemiology, Epidemiology and Statistics, Ethnicity, Evidence Syntheses, Exergaming, Group Cognitive Activities, Health Determinants, Health Improvement, Health Inequalities, Health Policy, Health Wellbeing and Independence, Health-Creating Society, Healthy Ageing, Healthy Behaviours, Healthy Behaviours Evidence, Healthy Communities, Healthy Eating, Healthy Lifestyles, Healthy Living, High Blood Pressure, Improving Local Public Health, Improving Public Health, Interactive Video Gaming, Interventions to Increase Patient Activation, Investment in Dementia Prevention, Leisure Activities and Social Networks, Life Course Approach, Life-Course Approach to Healthy and Active Ageing, Lifestyle, Lifestyle Intervention Programmes, Lifestyle Risk Factors, Meaningful Activity, Meaningful Activity and Occupation, Meaningful Activity in the Community, Meaningful Occupation, Meaningful Relationships, Mild Cognitive Impairment, Mild Cognitive Impairment (MCI), Modifiable Risk Factors, Nicotine Replacement Therapy, Obesity is the New Smoking, Occupational Therapy, Overlapping Risk Factors, Patient Activation, Patient Empowerment, Patient Empowerment Movement, Patient Engagement, Patient Engagement Strategies, Patient Factors (Demand Side), Patient Involvement, PHE: Public Health England, Physical Activity, Physical Exercise, Prevention, Prevention Agenda, Prevention of Dementia, Prevention of Dementia: Public Health England, Prevention Programmes, Preventive Care, Preventive Services, Promoting Brain Health (Blackfriars Consensus Statement), Protective Factors, Public Health, Public Health England (PHE), Public Health Promotion Campaigns, Risk Factors, Self-Care, Smoking, Smoking Cessation, Smoking-Related Brain Changes, Socio-Environmental Risk Factors, Structured Health Promotion Courses, Supporting People to Manage Their Health, Systematic Reviews and Meta-Analyses, Tobacco Consumption, Tobacco Smoking, Type 2 Diabetes, Unhealthy Behaviours, Unhealthy Lifestyles, Vascular Risk Factors, Volunteering
|
Leave a comment
Public Awareness of the Risk Factors for Dementia (PHE / NatCen / Alzheimer’s Society)
Summary A survey commissioned by Public Health England (PHE) has identified patchy levels of awareness concerning the “known” dementia risk factors. Most British people, it appears, are able to identify at least one risk factor for increased risk of developing … Continue reading →
Posted in Alzheimer's Society, Alzheimer’s Research UK, Universal Interest
|
Tagged Ageing and Society, Ageing Population, Alzheimer’s Research UK (ARUK), Alzheimer’s Society: Be Head Strong, ARUK: Alzheimer’s Research UK, Attitudes To Dementia (2015 British Social Attitudes Survey): Attitudes to Dementia, Attitudes To Dementia (2015 British Social Attitudes Survey): Dementia-Friendly Communities, Attitudes To Dementia (2015 British Social Attitudes Survey): Experience of Dementia, Attitudes To Dementia (2015 British Social Attitudes Survey): Knowledge of Dementia, Attitudes To Dementia (2015 British Social Attitudes Survey): Seeking Help, Attitudes To Dementia: Findings From 2015 British Social Attitudes Survey, “One You” Campaign, Blackfriars Consensus Statement, British Social Attitudes survey (BSA), Dementia Risk Factors, Dementia Risk Prevention, Dementia Risk Reduction, Dementia Risk Reduction and Prevention, Dementia-Friendly Communities, Depression, Determinants of Health, Diabetes Epidemic, Diseases and Medical Conditions Associated With Dementia Risk, Diseases and Medical Conditions Associated With Increased Dementia Risk: Depression, Diseases and Medical Conditions Associated With Increased Dementia Risk: Down’s Syndrome, Diseases and Medical Conditions Associated With Increased Dementia Risk: High Blood Pressure, Diseases and Medical Conditions Associated With Increased Dementia Risk: Mild Cognitive Impairment (MCI), Diseases and Medical Conditions Associated With Increased Dementia Risk: Parkinson’s Disease, Diseases and Medical Conditions Associated With Increased Dementia Risk: Stroke, Diseases and Medical Conditions Associated With Increased Dementia Risk: Type 2 Diabetes, Down's Syndrome, Dr Charles Alessi: Lead Prevention of Dementia at Public Health England, Dr Matthew Norton: Alzheimer's Research UK, Eatwell Plate, Education and Awareness, Epidemiology, Epidemiology and Statistics, Ethnicity, George McNamara: Head of Policy and Public Affairs at Alzheimer’s Society, Head Injuries and Dementia, Health Determinants, Health Improvement, Health Inequalities, Health Matters: Midlife Approaches to Reduce Dementia Risk, Health Policy, Health Wellbeing and Independence, Health-Creating Society, Healthy Ageing, Healthy Behaviours, Healthy Communities, Healthy Eating, Healthy Lifestyles, Healthy Living, High Blood Pressure, Improving Local Public Health, Improving Public Health, infographics on Dementia Risk Reduction, Interventions to Increase Patient Activation, Investment in Dementia Prevention, Life Course Approach, Life-Course Approach to Healthy and Active Ageing, Lifestyle, Lifestyle Intervention Programmes, Lifestyle Risk Factors, Mild Cognitive Impairment (MCI), Modifiable Risk Factors, NatCen: British Social Attitudes survey (BSA), National Centre for Social Research (NatCen), NHS OneYou, One You Campaign (PHE), Overlapping Risk Factors, Patient Activation, Patient Empowerment, Patient Empowerment Movement, Patient Engagement, Patient Engagement Strategies, Patient Factors (Demand Side), Patient Involvement, Physical Exercise, Prevalence of Type 2 Diabetes, Preventing and Managing Demand, Prevention, Prevention Agenda, Prevention of Dementia, Prevention of Dementia: Public Health England, Prevention Programmes, Preventive Care, Preventive Services, Promoting Brain Health (Blackfriars Consensus Statement), Protective Factors, Public Awareness, Public Awareness of the Risk Factors for Dementia (2016 UK), Public Health, Public Health England (PHE), Public Health Promotion Campaigns, Risk Factors, Self-Care, Self-Determination, Self-Directed Services, Self-Help, Self-Management, Self-Management Programmes, Self-Management Support, Staying Healthy for Longer, Stigma of Dementia, Supporting People to Manage Their Health, Susan Reid: Research Director at NatCen, Type 2 Diabetes
|
Leave a comment
Self-Care and the Patient Activation Measure (PAM) Tool (NHS England)
Summary NHS England has announced availability of an evidence-based tool designed to assist patients in obtaining person-centred support to manage their own care. The Patient Activation Measure (PAM) is a tool in the armoury of the Self-Care Programme, and is … Continue reading →
Posted in Commissioning, Community Care, For Carers (mostly), For Doctors (mostly), For Nurses and Therapists (mostly), For Researchers (mostly), For Social Workers (mostly), In the News, Integrated Care, International, King's Fund, Local Interest, Management of Condition, Mental Health, National, NHS, NHS England, Non-Pharmacological Treatments, Person-Centred Care, Personalisation, Quick Insights, UK, Universal Interest
|
Tagged Ageing Population, Ageing Society, Allocating Resources, Anu Singh: NHS England’s Director of Patient & Public Voice and Insight, Australia, Awareness and Understanding, Awareness of Potential Risks, Awareness Raising, “One You” Campaign, Canada, Care and Support Planning in General Practice, CCG Learning Environment, CCGs: Clinical Commissioning Groups, Clinical Commissioning Groups (CCGs), Clinician Support for Patient Activation (CS-PAM), Clinician Support for Patient Activation (CSPAM), Clinician Support for Patient Activation Measure (CSPAM), Community Mental Health, Community Mental Health Services, Dementia Risk Prevention, Dementia Risk Reduction, Denmark, Department of Planning Public Policy and Management: University of Oregon, Development of CSPAM Score (and Rasch Analysis), Diabetes Education, Dr Alf Collins: NHS England's National Clinical Advisor, Dr Karen Eastman: Clinical Director for NHS Horsham and Mid Sussex CCG, Dr Karen Eastman: GP Partner at Brow Medical Centre in Burgess Hill (West Sussex), Dr Karen Eastman: NHS England’s Person Centred Care Working Group, Dr Karen Eastman: NHSE PAM Learning, Dr Karen Eastman: RCGP Champion for Care and Support Planning, Dr Ollie Hart: Clinical Lead for Person-Centred Care at NHS Sheffield CCG, East London NHS Foundation Trust, Eating and Drinking, Economic Sustainability, Education and Awareness, Epidemiological Concepts, Epidemiology, Exemplar Social Movements, Financial Sustainability in the NHS, Forward View Into Action: New Care Models, Germany, Health Affairs (Journal), Health Affairs (Project Hope), Health and Wellbeing, Health Inequalities, Health Inequalities in England, Health Policy Research Group: University of Oregon, Healthy Ageing, Healthy Behaviours, Healthy Communities, Healthy Lifestyles, Healthy Living, Improving Local Public Health, Institute for Sustainable Environments: University of Oregon, Integrated Personal Commissioning (IPC) Programme, Integrated Personal Commissioning Sites, Interventions for Social Isolation and Loneliness in Men, Interventions to Increase Patient Activation, Jane Cummings: Chief Nursing Officer for England, Japan, Learning Environment (NHS England), Life Course Approach, Life-Course Approach to Healthy and Active Ageing, Lifestyle, Lifestyle Risk Factors, Long-Term Conditions (LTCs), Long-Term Conditions and The Mandate, Managing Care of People With Long-Term Conditions, Managing Your Health and Well-Being, Mandate to NHS England, Measuring Patient Activation, Neighbours in Poplar, Netherlands, NHS Crawley, NHS England Five Year Forward View, NHS England Learning Environment, NHS England's Realising the Value Programme, NHS England’s Patient Activation Narrative, NHS England’s Realising the Value Programme for Patient and Community Empowerment (NHS England)., NHS England’s Supported Self Care Programme, NHS Five Year Forward View (5YFV), NHS Horsham and Mid Sussex CCG, NHS Horsham and Mid-Sussex, NHS Mandate, NHS Sheffield CCG, NHS Tower Hamlets, Norway, Nudge, Obesity, Obesity Time-Bomb, Overlapping Risk Factors, PAM and CSPAM Measures, PAM: Patient Activation Measure, Patient Activation, Patient Activation Measure (PAM), Patient Activation Measure (PAM) Tool, Patient Activation Measure Licences, Patient Activation: Costs and Outcomes, Patient and Community Empowerment, Patient and Public Participation, Patient Choice, Patient Competencies, Patient Control, Patient Empowerment, Patient Empowerment Movement, Patient Engagement, Patient Engagement Strategies, Patient Expectations, Patient Experience, Patient Factors (Demand Side), Patient Involvement, Patient Safety, Patient Supported Self-Management Programme, Poplar and Limehouse Health Network, Prevention, Prevention Agenda, Prevention Programmes, Preventive Care, Preventive Services, Professor Alf Collins: NHS England’s National Clinical Advisor for the Personalisation and Choice Group, Protective Factors, Quality and Outcomes Framework; the Patient Activation Measure (PAM), Realising the Value, Realising the Value Programme, Reducing Demand (Treatment and Recovery), Reducing Downstream Spending (Prevention Public Health and Self-Care), Reducing Health Inequalities, Reducing Waste in the NHS, SAPPHIRE Group, SAPPHIRE Group (Social Science Applied to Healthcare Improvement Research): University of Leicester, Self-Care, Self-Care Programme, Self-Determination, Self-Directed Services, Self-Directed Support, Self-Directed Support for Long Term Conditions, Self-Help, Self-Management, Self-Management in Chronic Illness, Self-Management Support, Service User Involvement, Sir Derek Wanless: Wanless Challenge, Social Isolation, Somerset Practice Quality Scheme (SPQS), Staying Healthy for Longer, Support for Self-Care, Supported Self Care Programme (NHS England), Supported Self-Care, Supporting People to Manage Their Health, Supporting Self-Care, Sustainability and Transformation Plan (STP) Areas, Sustainable Health and Social Care, Sustainable Improvement Team: NHS England, Tailored Health Coaching Service, Tailored Health Coaching: NHS Horsham and Mid Sussex CCG, Targeting and Allocating Resources, Type 2 Diabetes, UK Renal Registry, University of Leicester, University of Leicester: SAPPHIRE Group (Social Science Applied to Healthcare Improvement Research), University of Oregon, Wanless Challenge (2002), Your Move
|
Leave a comment
Midlife Approaches to Reducing Dementia Risk (PHE)
Summary Public Health England (PHE) has produced an online resource on the various approaches to reducing the prevalence and incidence of dementia. There are statistics indicating the scale of the challenge, and a summary of the risk factors that can … Continue reading →
Posted in Commissioning, Community Care, Department of Health, For Carers (mostly), For Doctors (mostly), For Nurses and Therapists (mostly), For Researchers (mostly), For Social Workers (mostly), In the News, Integrated Care, Local Interest, National, NHS, Non-Pharmacological Treatments, Patient Information, Practical Advice, Public Health England, Quick Insights, Statistics, UK, Universal Interest
|
Tagged Action on Sugar, Active and Healthy Ageing, Ageing Policy in the UK, Agetrust, Alcohol and Drug Consumption, Alcohol Concern, Alcohol Consumption, Alcohol Misuse, Alcohol or Tobacco Withdrawal, Alcohol-Related Dementia, Attributable Cost of Dementia, Awareness, Awareness and Campaigns, Awareness and Understanding, Awareness of Potential Risks, Awareness Raising, “One You” Campaign, Blackfriars Consensus Statement, Blood Pressure, Burden of Dementia, Burden of Dementia (Statistics), CCGs: Clinical Commissioning Groups, Clinical Commissioning Groups (CCGs), Consensus Action on Salt and Health, Coordinated Health and Social Care, Dementia and Neurological Conditions, Dementia Intelligence Network (DIN) Profile Tool, Dementia Risk Factors, Dementia Risk Prevention, Dementia Risk Reduction, Dementia: a Public Health Priority, Diet and Dementia, Dietary Factors, Disproportionate Burden of Dementia on Women, Eating and Drinking, Economic Sustainability, Education and Awareness, Epidemiology, Epidemiology and Statistics, Ethnicity, Health Determinants, Health Improvement, Health Inequalities, Health Matters: Midlife Approaches to Reduce Dementia Risk, Health Policy, Health Wellbeing and Independence, Health-Creating Society, Healthy Ageing, Healthy Behaviours, Healthy Communities, Healthy Lifestyles, Healthy Living, Improving Local Public Health, Improving Public Health, infographics on Dementia Risk Reduction, Interventions to Increase Patient Activation, Investment in Dementia Prevention, JHWSs: Joint Health and Wellbeing Strategies, Joined-Up Care, Joint Health and Wellbeing Strategies, Joint Health and Wellbeing Strategy (JHWS), Joint Strategic Needs Assessment (JSNA), JSNA Leads In Local Authorities, JSNAs: Joint Strategic Needs Assessments, Life Course Approach, Life-Course Approach to Healthy and Active Ageing, Lifestyle, Lifestyle Risk Factors, Local Authorities, Loneliness, Mediterranean Diet, Moderate Drinking, Modifiable Risk Factors, NHS England’s Five Year Forward View, NHS Health Checks, NHS OneYou, Nudge, Obesity, Obesity Risk, Obesity Time-Bomb, One You Campaign (PHE), Overlapping Risk Factors, Patient Activation, Patient Empowerment, Patient Empowerment Movement, Patient Engagement, Patient Engagement Strategies, Patient Factors (Demand Side), Patient Involvement, PHE: Public Health England, Pre-Existing Medical Conditions, Preventative Care, Preventative Services, Preventing and Managing Demand, Prevention, Prevention Agenda, Prevention Agenda Linking Dementia and Other Non-Communicable Diseases, Prevention of Dementia, Prevention of Dementia: Public Health England, Prevention Programmes, Preventive Care, Preventive Services, Protective Factors, Public Awareness, Public Health, Public Health England (PHE), Public Health Promotion Campaigns, Public Health Specialists in Local Authorities, Raising Awareness, Reducing Waste in the NHS, Risk and Protective Factors, Risk and Protective Factors for Cognitive Decline and Dementia, Risk Factors, Risk Factors for Alzheimer's Diseease, Salt, Salt Reduction, Sedentary Behaviour, Self-Administration, Self-Care, Self-Determination, Self-Directed Services, Self-Help, Self-Management, Self-Management Programmes, Self-Management Support, Service User Involvement, Smoking, Social Determinants of Health Inequalities, Social Epidemiology, Social Movements, Social Networks, Social Prescribing, Social Wellbeing, South Asian Community, Staying Healthy for Longer, Supporting People to Manage Their Health, Sustainability, Sustainable Health and Care Services, Sustainable Health and Social Care, Type 2 Diabetes, Unhealthy Behaviours, Unhealthy Lifestyles, Unhealthy Living, Vascular Risk Factors, Wellbeing, Women and Dementia
|
Leave a comment
Public Health England’s “One You” Campaign (BBC News / PHE / NHS OneYou)
Summary Public Health England’s “One You” campaign is about engaging patients and the public concerning the various practical steps it is possible to take to avoid preventable disease. It is estimated that the NHS wastes more than £11 billion per … Continue reading →
Posted in BBC News, Commissioning, Department of Health, For Carers (mostly), For Doctors (mostly), For Nurses and Therapists (mostly), For Researchers (mostly), For Social Workers (mostly), In the News, Integrated Care, Management of Condition, National, NHS, Non-Pharmacological Treatments, Patient Care Pathway, Patient Information, Person-Centred Care, Personalisation, Public Health England, Quick Insights, UK, Universal Interest
|
Tagged Action on Sugar, Alcohol and Drug Consumption, Alcohol Concern, Alcohol Consumption, Alcohol Misuse, Alcohol or Tobacco Withdrawal, Association of Directors of Public Health, Awareness, Awareness and Campaigns, Awareness and Understanding, Awareness of Potential Risks, Awareness Raising, “One You” Campaign, BBC Health News, Coalition of the Willing, Constrained Funding, Coordinated Health and Social Care, Councillor Izzi Seccombe: Local Government Association (LGA), Culture, Culture and Leadership, Culture Change, Demand and Capacity, Demand Management, Demand-Side Effectiveness, Demand-Side Factors, Dementia Risk Factors, Dementia Risk Prevention, Dementia Risk Reduction, Dementia: a Public Health Priority, Diet and Dementia, Dietary Factors, Eating and Drinking, Economic Sustainability, Education and Awareness, Epidemiology, Funding Challenges, Health and Social Care, Health and Social Care Configuration, Health and Social Care Costs, Health and Social Care Integration, Health as a Social Movement (NHS England), Health Demand, Health Determinants, Health Improvement, Health Inequalities, Health Policy, Health Wellbeing and Independence, Health-Creating Society, Healthy Ageing, Healthy Behaviours, Healthy Communities, Healthy Lifestyles, Healthy Living, Improving Local Public Health, Improving Public Health, Interventions to Increase Patient Activation, Joined-Up Care, Life Course Approach, Life-Course Approach to Healthy and Active Ageing, Lifestyle, Lifestyle Risk Factors, Local Government Association: LGA, Moderate Drinking, Modifiable Risk Factors, Nanny State-ism (Encouragement of Healthy Behaviours), NHS England’s Five Year Forward View, NHS Five Year Forward View (5YFV), NHS OneYou, Non-Communicable Diseases (NCD), Nudge, Obesity, Obesity Risk, Obesity Time-Bomb, One You Campaign (PHE), Overlapping Risk Factors, Patient Activation, Patient Empowerment, Patient Empowerment Movement, Patient Engagement, Patient Engagement Strategies, Patient Factors (Demand Side), Patient Involvement, PHE, PHE: Public Health England, Preventative Care, Preventative Services, Preventing and Managing Demand, Prevention, Prevention Agenda, Prevention Agenda Linking Dementia and Other Non-Communicable Diseases, Prevention of Dementia, Prevention of Dementia: Public Health England, Prevention Programmes, Preventive Care, Preventive Services, Public Awareness, Public Health, Public Health Campaigns, Public Health England (PHE), Public Health Promotion Campaigns, Raising Awareness, Reducing Demand (Treatment and Recovery), Reducing Downstream Spending (Prevention Public Health and Self-Care), Reducing Waste in the NHS, Sedentary Behaviour, Self-Administration, Self-Care, Self-Determination, Self-Directed Services, Self-Directed Support, Self-Directed Support for Long Term Conditions, Self-Help, Self-Management, Self-Management in Chronic Illness, Self-Management Programmes, Self-Management Support, Service User Involvement, Smoking, Social Determinants of Health Inequalities, Social Epidemiology, Social Movements, Social Networks, Social Prescribing, Social Wellbeing, Staying Healthy for Longer, Support for People with Complex Needs, Supporting People to Manage Their Health, Sustainability, Sustainable Health and Care Services, Sustainable Health and Social Care, Unhealthy Behaviours, Unhealthy Lifestyles, Unhealthy Living, Vascular Risk Factors, Wellbeing
|
Leave a comment
Realising the Value: Background to “Health as a Social Movement” (NHS England / Health Foundation / Nesta)
Summary A report has been published concerning the “Realising the Value Programme”, which in turn supplies the theoretical background for NHS England’s “Health as a Social Movement” programme. This report explores the concept of people and communities being put at … Continue reading →
Posted in Charitable Bodies, Commissioning, Community Care, For Carers (mostly), For Doctors (mostly), For Nurses and Therapists (mostly), For Researchers (mostly), For Social Workers (mostly), Health Foundation, In the News, Integrated Care, Management of Condition, National, NHS, NHS England, Non-Pharmacological Treatments, Patient Care Pathway, Person-Centred Care, Personalisation, Quick Insights, UK, Universal Interest
|
Tagged 5YFV: NHS Five Year Forward View, Active and Healthy Ageing, Ageing Policy in the UK, Anu Singh: NHS England’s Director of Patient & Public Voice and Insight, Applied Research Centre in Health and Lifestyle Interventions: Coventry University, Awareness and Campaigns, Awareness and Understanding, Awareness of Potential Risks, Awareness Raising, Bangor University, Barriers to Self-Management in Early Stage Dementia, Behavioural Insights Team, Co-Production, Co-Production for Wellbeing, Coalition of the Willing, Commissioning and Funding, Commissioning for Value, Commissioning on Grounds of Quality and User Involvement, Community and Voluntary Sector, Community Services, Community Volunteering, Community-Based Care, Community-Based Interventions, Community-Based Services, Community-Based Support, Constrained Funding, Coordinated Health and Social Care, Coventry, Coventry University, Culture, Culture and Leadership, Culture Change, Demand and Capacity, Demand-Side Effectiveness, Demand-Side Factors, Economic Sustainability, Embedding Co-Production, Empowerment, Engagement, Exemplar Social Movements, Financial Sustainability in the NHS, Forward View Into Action: New Care Models, Funding Challenges, Health and Social Care, Health and Social Care Configuration, Health and Social Care Costs, Health and Social Care Integration, Health as a Social Movement (NHS England), Health Demand, Health Determinants, Health Improvement, Health Inequalities, Health Inequalities in England, Health Policy, Health Wellbeing and Independence, Health-Creating Society, Healthy Ageing, Healthy Behaviours, Healthy Communities, Healthy Lifestyles, Healthy Living, Improving Local Public Health, Improving Public Health, Institute of Health and Society: Newcastle University, Integrated and Community-Based Care, Interventions to Increase Patient Activation, Joined-Up Care, Life Course Approach, Life-Course Approach to Healthy and Active Ageing, Lifestyle, Lifestyle Risk Factors, Local Empowerment, Mental Health Services for Older People (Juniper Centre) Birmingham, National and Local Information Campaigns, National Association for Voluntary and Community Action (NAVCA), National Campaigns, National Voices, NAVCA, NAVCA (National Association for Voluntary and Community Action), nef (the new economics foundation), NESTA, NESTA: National Endowment for Science Technology and the Arts, New Care Models, New Care Models: Vanguard Sites, New Economics Foundation (nef), Newcastle University, NHS England’s Five Year Forward View, NHS Five Year Forward View (5YFV), Nudge, Obesity Time-Bomb, Overlapping Risk Factors, Patient Activation, Patient Empowerment, Patient Empowerment Movement, Patient Engagement, Patient Engagement Strategies, Patient Factors (Demand Side), Patient Involvement, Paul Healy: NHS Confederation, Peer Support, People Not Medicine to Save the NHS (NEF), Preventative Care, Preventative Services, Preventing and Managing Demand, Prevention, Prevention Agenda, Prevention Programmes, Preventive Care, Preventive Services, Pritti Mehta: Strategy Lead for Person Centred Care Team at NHS England, Public Awareness, Public Health, Public Health Campaigns, Public Health Promotion Campaigns, Raising Awareness, Realising the Value, Realising the Value Programme, Redesigning More Productive Services, Reducing Demand (Treatment and Recovery), Reducing Downstream Spending (Prevention Public Health and Self-Care), Reducing Waste in the NHS, Regional Voices, Risk Factors, Royal Society of Arts, RSA Action and Research Centre, School of Psychology: Bangor University, Self-Administration, Self-Care, Self-Determination, Self-Directed Services, Self-Directed Support, Self-Directed Support for Long Term Conditions, Self-Help, Self-Management, Self-Management in Chronic Illness, Self-Management in People With Early Stage Dementia, Self-Management Interventions in Early Stage of Dementia, Self-Management Programmes, Self-Management Support, Service User Involvement, Social Determinants of Health Inequalities, Social Epidemiology, Social Movements, Social Networks, Social Prescribing, Social Wellbeing, Staying Healthy for Longer, Support for People with Complex Needs, Supporting People to Manage Their Health, Sustainability, Sustainable Health and Care Services, Sustainable Health and Social Care, Transformation Funding, Unhealthy Behaviours, Unhealthy Lifestyles, Unhealthy Living, University of Wolverhampton, Vanguard Programme, Vanguards: New Care Models Programme, Volunteering Matters, Wellbeing
|
Leave a comment
Health as a Social Movement (NHS England)
Summary NHS England has launched a three-year programme to support what is hoped will become a broad social movement to encourage wider patient and public participation in improving health and care. Full Text Link Reference Health as a social movement. … Continue reading →
Posted in Charitable Bodies, Commissioning, Community Care, For Carers (mostly), For Nurses and Therapists (mostly), For Researchers (mostly), For Social Workers (mostly), Integrated Care, Management of Condition, National, NHS, NHS Evidence, Non-Pharmacological Treatments, Person-Centred Care, Personalisation, Quick Insights, UK, Universal Interest
|
Tagged 5YFV: NHS Five Year Forward View, Accountable Clinical Network for Cancer, Accountable Clinical Network for Cancer (Acute Care Collaboration), Accountable Clinical Networks, Accountable Clinical Networks for Cancer, Active and Healthy Ageing, Acute Care Collaboration (ACC) Vanguards, Acute Care Collaboration Vanguards, Ageing Policy in the UK, Airedale and Partners, Airedale and Partners (Enhanced Health in Care Homes), Awareness and Campaigns, Awareness and Understanding, Awareness of Potential Risks, Awareness Raising, Better Care Together, Better Care Together (Morecambe Bay Health Community) (Integrated Primary and Acute Care System), Better Care Together (Morecambe Bay Health Community) Vanguard, Campaigning, Care and Support for People With Dementia in Care Homes, Co-Production, Co-Production for Wellbeing, Coalition of the Willing, Commissioning and Funding, Commissioning for Carers Principles: Principle 2 Support What Works For Carers Share And Learn From Others, Commissioning for Value, Commissioning on Grounds of Quality and User Involvement, Community and Voluntary Sector, Community Services, Community Volunteering, Community-Based Care, Community-Based Interventions, Community-Based Services, Community-Based Support, Constrained Funding, Coordinated Health and Social Care, Culture, Culture and Leadership, Culture Change, Demand and Capacity, Demand-Side Effectiveness, Demand-Side Factors, Dementia: People With Dementia in Care Homes, Economic Sustainability, Embedding Co-Production, Empowerment, Engagement, Enhanced Health in Care Homes, Epidemiological Concepts, Epidemiology, Exemplar Social Movements, Financial Sustainability in the NHS, Forward View Into Action: New Care Models, Funding Challenges, GM Cancer Vanguard, Health and Social Care, Health and Social Care Configuration, Health and Social Care Costs, Health and Social Care Integration, Health as a Social Movement (NHS England), Health Demand, Health Determinants, Health Improvement, Health Inequalities, Health Inequalities in England, Health Policy, Health Wellbeing and Independence, Health-Creating Society, Healthy Ageing, Healthy Behaviours, Healthy Communities, Healthy Lifestyles, Healthy Living, Improving Local Public Health, Improving Public Health, Integrated and Community-Based Care, Integrated Primary and Acute Care Systems, Integrated Primary and Acute Care Systems (PACS), Integrated Primary and Acute Care Systems (PACS) Vanguard Sites, Interventions to Increase Patient Activation, Joined-Up Care, Life Course Approach, Life-Course Approach to Healthy and Active Ageing, Lifestyle, Lifestyle Risk Factors, Local Empowerment, Models of Enhanced Health in Care Homes - Vanguard Site: Airedale NHS Foundation, Models of Enhanced Health in Care Homes Vanguard Sites, Multispecialty Community Providers (MCPs) - Vanguard Site: Stockport Together, National and Local Information Campaigns, National Campaigns, nef (the new economics foundation), NESTA, NESTA: National Endowment for Science Technology and the Arts, New Care Models, New Care Models: Vanguard Sites, New Economics Foundation (nef), New Models of Acute Care Collaboration: Vanguard Sites, NHS Airedale Wharfedale and Craven CCG, NHS England’s Five Year Forward View, NHS Erewash CCG, NHS Five Year Forward View (5YFV), Nudge, Obesity Time-Bomb, Overlapping Risk Factors, Patient Activation, Patient Empowerment, Patient Empowerment Movement, Patient Engagement, Patient Engagement Strategies, Patient Factors (Demand Side), Patient Involvement, People Not Medicine to Save the NHS (NEF), Preventative Care, Preventative Services, Preventing and Managing Demand, Prevention, Prevention Agenda, Prevention Programmes, Preventive Care, Preventive Services, Public Awareness, Public Health, Public Health Campaigns, Public Health Promotion Campaigns, Raising Awareness, Redesigning More Productive Services, Reducing Demand (Treatment and Recovery), Reducing Downstream Spending (Prevention Public Health and Self-Care), Reducing Waste in the NHS, Risk Factors, Royal Free London NHS Foundation Trust, Royal Society of Arts, RSA Action and Research Centre, Self-Administration, Self-Care, Self-Determination, Self-Directed Services, Self-Directed Support, Self-Directed Support for Long Term Conditions, Self-Help, Self-Management, Self-Management in Chronic Illness, Self-Management Support, Service User Involvement, Social Determinants of Health Inequalities, Social Epidemiology, Social Movements, Social Networks, Social Prescribing, Social Wellbeing, Staying Healthy for Longer, Stockport Together, Stockport Together (Multispecialty Community Provider), Support for People with Complex Needs, Supporting People to Manage Their Health, Sustainability, Sustainable Health and Care Services, Sustainable Health and Social Care, Transformation Funding, Unhealthy Behaviours, Unhealthy Lifestyles, Unhealthy Living, Vanguard Programme, Vanguards: New Care Models Programme, Wellbeing, Wellbeing Erewash – Your Life Your Way (Multispecialty Community Provider), Wellbeing Erewash: Your Life Your Way, What Works
|
Leave a comment
The Power of Language: Weighing the Pros and Cons of the Term “Frailty” (Nursing Times / Age UK / BGS / BritainThinks)
Summary The “Frailty: Language and Perceptions” report, commissioned by Age UK and the British Geriatrics Society, indicates that use of the word “frailty” could deter older people from accessing services. Medical terminology such as “frailty” (and presumably “geriatric” too?) sometimes … Continue reading →
Posted in Acute Hospitals, Age UK, Charitable Bodies, Commissioning, Community Care, Diagnosis, End of Life Care, For Carers (mostly), For Doctors (mostly), For Nurses and Therapists (mostly), For Researchers (mostly), For Social Workers (mostly), Integrated Care, Management of Condition, Models of Dementia Care, Patient Care Pathway, Patient Information, Person-Centred Care, Personalisation, Practical Advice, Quick Insights, RCN, UK, Universal Interest
|
Tagged Age-Friendly Environments, Ageing and Society, Ageing Population, Articulating the Concept of Frailty, Attitudes About Support to Prevent and Manage Frailty, Attitudes to Ageing, BGS, BritainThinks, British Geriatrics Society (BGS), Caroline Abrahams: Director of Age UK, Comprehensive Geriatric Assessment (CGA), Coping Mechanisms, Coping Strategies, Cultural Perceptions, Dementia Friendly Language, Dementia-Friendly Communities, Dementia-Friendly Environments, Dementia-Friendly Resources, Dementia-Friendly Terminology, Enablement, End-User Experience, Experiences, Fit for Frailty (BGS), Fit for Frailty Guidance (BGS), Frailty: Language and Perceptions, Hidden Influence and Power of Words, Independence, Information and Signposting Services, International Classification of Diseases (ICD), Interventions to Increase Patient Activation, Labelling, Language (Terminology), Long-Term Conditions (LTCs), Misperceptions, Negative Experiences of Care, Nursing Times, Participatory Decision-Making, Patient Activation, Patient and Community Empowerment, Patient and Public Voice, Patient Choice, Patient Empowerment, Patient Empowerment Movement, Patient Engagement, Patient Engagement Strategies, Patient Experience, Patient Involvement, Power of Language, Power of Words, Prescribed Disengagement, Prescribed DisengagementTM (Kate Swaffer), Pros and Cons of Frailty (Terminology), Reablement, Reducing Stigma, Resilience, Self-Care, Signposting Services and Knowledge, Signposting to Sources of Practical Help, Stigma and Discrimination, Stigma-Free Environments, Strategies for Informing Educating and Involving Patients, Support and Coping Mechanisms, Support for People with Complex Needs, Supporting Self-Care, Unmet Needs, Wellness and Resilience
|
Leave a comment
Realising the Value Programme (NHS England / Dementia / Australian Journal of Dementia Care)
Summary The NHS Five Year Forward View requires more support for people with long term conditions, enabling them to manage their own health. The NHS England “Realising the Value Programme” is about putting such plans into action. “NHS England is … Continue reading →
Posted in Acute Hospitals, Charitable Bodies, Commissioning, Community Care, For Carers (mostly), For Doctors (mostly), For Nurses and Therapists (mostly), For Researchers (mostly), For Social Workers (mostly), Health Foundation, In the News, Integrated Care, Local Interest, Management of Condition, National, NHS, NHS England, Non-Pharmacological Treatments, Patient Care Pathway, Person-Centred Care, Personalisation, Quick Insights, Standards, UK, Universal Interest
|
Tagged 5YFV: NHS Five Year Forward View, Active and Healthy Ageing, Advice and Information, Advice and Support, AJDC: Australian Journal of Dementia Care, Alzheimer’s Australia, Alzheimer’s Australia Consumer Dementia Research Network, Alzheimer’s Australia Dementia, Alzheimer’s Australia Dementia Language Guidelines, Alzheimer’s Society of Ireland, Anu Singh: NHS England’s Director of Patient & Public Voice and Insight, Asset-Based Approaches to Health and Wellbeing, Australia, Australian Dementia Advisory Committee, Australian Journal of Dementia Care, Autonomy and Choice, Barriers and Facilitators to Participation, Barriers to Engagement, Barriers to Integration, Barriers to Involvement, Barriers to Joined-Up Care, Barriers to Older People Accessing Help and Support, Behavioural Insights Team, Caregiver Support, Carer Support, Carer Support Services, Challenges of Reconfiguration, Chronic and Severe Illness, Chronic Care, Co-Commissioning, Co-Production, Coalition for Collaborative Care, Collaboration, Collaborative Care, Commissioning for Maximum Value, Commissioning for Outcomes, Commissioning for Transformation, Commissioning for Value, Commissioning on Grounds of Quality and User Involvement, Community and Voluntary Sector, Community Empowerment, Community Engagement, Community Health Services, Community Service Volunteers (CSV), cottish Dementia Working Group, Deconstructing the Language of Dementia, Dementia Advocacy and Support Network International (DASNI), Dementia Alliance International, Dementia Friendly Language, Dementia-Friendly Communities, Dementia-Friendly Resources, Dementia-Friendly Resources: Dementia Language Guidelines, Dignity4Disability in South Australia, Discrimination and Stereotyping, Empowering Patients, Empowerment and Dementia, Encouraging Healthy Behaviour, Encouraging Innovation, Engagement, European Dementia Working Group, Giles Wilmore: Director for Patient and Public Voice and Information at NHS England, Group-Based Activities to Support Health and Wellbeing, Health and Wellbeing, Health Coaching, Health Policy Charities, Healthy Ageing, Healthy Behaviours, Healthy Lifestyles, Healthy Living, Help at Home, Increasing Wellbeing, Information and Advice, Informed Choice, Integrated Care and Support, Integrated Care Services, Integrated Commissioning, Integrated Personal Commissioning Programme, Integrated Services, Integration of Health and Social Care, Integration of Health and Social Care for Older People, Interventions to Increase Patient Activation, Kate Swaffer: Chair of Dementia Alliance International, Labelling, Language (Terminology), Language of Dementia, Lifestyle, Lifestyle Factors, Lifestyle Tools, Lived Experience, Local Commissioning, Local Context, Local Empowerment, Local Flexibility, Local Leadership, Long-Term Condition Assessment, Long-Term Conditions, Long-Term Conditions (LTCs), National Association for Voluntary and Community Action (NAVCA), National Endowment for Science Technology and the Arts (NESTA), National Voices, NAVCA, NAVCA (National Association for Voluntary and Community Action), NESTA, NESTA: National Endowment for Science Technology and the Arts, Newcastle University, NHS England's Realising the Value Programme, NHS England’s Realising the Value Programme for Patient and Community Empowerment (NHS England)., NHS Five Year Forward View, Participatory Decision-Making, Patient Activation, Patient and Community Empowerment, Patient and Public Voice, Patient Choice, Patient Empowerment, Patient Empowerment Movement, Patient Engagement, Patient Engagement Strategies, Patient Experience, Patient Involvement, Peer Support, Prescribed Disengagement, Prescribed DisengagementTM (Kate Swaffer), Preventative Care, Prevention, Preventive Care, Preventive Services, Problem Prevention, Public Agency and Community Empowerment Strategies (PACES), Public Health, Questioning BPSD, Realising the Value, Realising the Value Programme, Reducing Stigma, Regional Voices, Self Management of Chronic Disease, Self-Administration, Self-Care, Self-Determination, Self-Directed Services, Self-Directed Support, Self-Efficacy, Self-Help, Self-Management Education, Self-Management in Chronic Illness, Service User Involvement, Staying Healthy for Longer, Stereotyping, Stigma and Discrimination, Stigma of Dementia, Stigma-Free Environments, Strategies for Informing Educating and Involving Patients, Support for People with Complex Needs, Support to Care Home Residents, Supporting Carers, Supporting Healthy Lifestyles, Supporting Patients to Leave Hospital, Supporting People to Manage Their Health, Supporting Self-Care, Transforming Participation in Health and Care, University of Wollongong, Voluntary and Community Sector (VCS), Voluntary Sector, Voluntary Sector and Ageing, Voluntary Voices
|
Leave a comment
NHS England’s Realising the Value Programme for Patient and Community Empowerment (NHS England)
Summary The “Realising the Value Programme” allows NHS England to award grants of up to £500,000 to charities and not for profit organisations (or consortia) to identify and / or implement evidence-based approaches to self-care. Initiatives involving the commissioning and … Continue reading →
Posted in Charitable Bodies, Commissioning, Community Care, For Carers (mostly), For Nurses and Therapists (mostly), For Researchers (mostly), For Social Workers (mostly), In the News, Integrated Care, Local Interest, Management of Condition, Mental Health, Models of Dementia Care, National, NHS England, Non-Pharmacological Treatments, Person-Centred Care, Personalisation, Quick Insights, UK, Universal Interest
|
Tagged 5YFV: NHS Five Year Forward View, Active and Healthy Ageing, Advice and Information, Advice and Support, Andrew Pike: NHS England Director of Commissioning Operations for the East, Andrew Reed: NHS England Director of Commissioning Operations for West Midlands, Anthony Farnsworth: NHS England Director of Commissioning Operations for South West, Autonomy and Choice, Barriers and Facilitators to Participation, Barriers to Engagement, Barriers to Integration, Barriers to Involvement, Barriers to Joined-Up Care, Barriers to Older People Accessing Help and Support, Caregiver Support, Carer Support, Carer Support Services, Challenges of Reconfiguration, Chronic and Severe Illness, Chronic Care, Clare Duggan: NHS England Director of Commissioning Operations for Cheshire and Merseyside, Co-Commissioning, Co-Production, Collaboration, Collaborative Care, Commissioning for Maximum Value, Commissioning for Outcomes, Commissioning for Transformation, Commissioning for Value, Commissioning on Grounds of Quality and User Involvement, Community and Voluntary Sector, Community Empowerment, Community Engagement, Community Health Services, David Sharp: NHS England Director of Commissioning Operations for Central Midlands, Directors of Commissioning Operations (NHS England), Empowering Patients, Encouraging Healthy Behaviour, Encouraging Innovation, Engagement, Felicity Cox: NHS England Director of Commissioning Operations for South East, Five Year Forward View (NHS England), Giles Wilmore: Director for Patient and Public Voice and Information at NHS England, Giles Wilmore: NHS England, Graham Urwin: NHS England Director of Commissioning Operations for Lancashire and Greater Manchester, Health and Wellbeing, Healthy Ageing, Healthy Behaviours, Healthy Lifestyles, Healthy Living, Help at Home, Increasing Wellbeing, Information and Advice, Informed Choice, Integrated Care and Support, Integrated Care Services, Integrated Commissioning, Integrated Services, Integration of Health and Social Care, Integration of Health and Social Care for Older People, Interventions to Increase Patient Activation, Jonathan Marron: Director of Strategy at PHE, Lifestyle, Lifestyle Factors, Lifestyle Tools, Local Commissioning, Local Context, Local Empowerment, Local Flexibility, Local Leadership, Long-Term Condition Assessment, Long-Term Conditions, Long-Term Conditions (LTCs), Moira Dumma: NHS England Director of Commissioning Operations for Yorkshire and the Humber, NHS England (Formerly the NHS Commissioning Board), NHS England's Realising the Value Programme, NHS England: Directors of Commissioning Operations, NHS Five Year Forward View, Participatory Decision-Making, Patient Activation, Patient and Community Empowerment, Patient and Public Voice, Patient Choice, Patient Empowerment, Patient Empowerment Movement, Patient Engagement, Patient Engagement Strategies, Patient Involvement, Preventative Care, Prevention, Preventive Care, Preventive Services, Problem Prevention, Public Agency and Community Empowerment Strategies (PACES), Public Health, Realising the Value, Realising the Value Programme, Regional Directors of Commissioning Operations (NHS England), Self Management of Chronic Disease, Self-Administration, Self-Care, Self-Determination, Self-Directed Services, Self-Directed Support, Self-Help, Self-Management in Chronic Illness, Service User Involvement, Staying Healthy for Longer, Strategies for Informing Educating and Involving Patients, Support for People with Complex Needs, Support to Care Home Residents, Supporting Carers, Supporting Healthy Lifestyles, Supporting Patients to Leave Hospital, Supporting People to Manage Their Health, Supporting Self-Care, Tailored Coaching, Telehealth and Self Care, Wendy Saviour: NHS England Director of Commissioning Operations for North Midlands
|
Leave a comment