News Archive
ENRICHEnabling Research in Care Homes
NEwS ARCHIVE
ENRICH news archive
This archive contains news items published on the ENRICH site May 2014 - March 2019.
Latest posts regarding items of interest to ENRICH audiences can be found in the posts section.
NIHR Dissemination Centre – Better Endings – right care, right place, right time
Adam Smith
Helping people to die with dignity, compassion and comfort is an important goal of any health service. Recent accounts have provided rich insights into some of the challenges for healthcare professionals trying to meet the needs of people at the end of life, ranging from reports of inequalities in access to specialist palliative care to skills and training gaps for general staff caring for the dying.
Better Endings is the NIHR Dissemination Centre’s first Themed Review. It brings together evidence from the NIHR, focusing largely on the quality and organisation of care. The review aims to help those delivering, planning or using end of life services to ensure that the right care is delivered in the right place at the right time.
Top 10 health and research news stories from 2015
NHS Choices
10. E-cigarettes may make lungs vulnerable to infection
In February, there was concern that the vapour produced by e-cigarettes contains free radicals – atoms and molecules that are toxic to cells – and that this could damage people’s lungs. Our conclusion: are e-cigarettes safer than normal cigarettes? Almost certainly. Are they 100% safe? Probably not.
9. Meningitis B vaccine ‘available from September’
There was good news in June, with the announcement that a new vaccine for meningitis B – a highly aggressive strain of bacterial meningitis – would be added to the NHS childhood vaccination schedule. This was the world’s first publicly funded vaccination programme for the potentially fatal disease.
8. UK life expectancy expected to rise to late 80s by 2030
In April, a new modelling study looking at trends in life expectancy estimated that male babies born in 2030 could live to an average of 85.7 years, with females living an average of 87.6 years. The research also highlighted the stark effect that economic inequalities can have on health – for example, it estimated that life expectancy in the affluent London borough of Kensington and Chelsea would be five to six years higher than the working class area of Tower Hamlets.
7. Child obesity rates are ‘stabilising’
According to BBC News in January, the rise in childhood obesity “may be beginning to level off”. While it was encouraging to see that the child obesity epidemic is not worsening, there were no clear signs that it’s getting any better. Underlying factors, such as low activity levels and easy access to calorie-rich, nutrient-poor foods, still need to be addressed.
6. Strenuous jogging ‘as bad as doing no exercise’ claim
“Too much jogging ‘as bad as no exercise at all’,” BBC News reported in February. But the results of the Danish study this headline comes from were not as clear-cut as the media made out. One of the study’s major limitations was that once the joggers were split into groups by duration, frequency and pace, some individual groups – particularly the most active groups – were much smaller. And, to be honest, people overexercising is not a pressing concern in the UK: the more common problem is people not doing enough.
5. Drinking ‘plenty of red wine’ won’t help you lose weight
If it sounds too good to be true, then it probably is. And that was the case with The Daily Telegraph’s headline from June: “How to lose weight – drink plenty of red wine”. The headline was simply nonsense. The study it’s based on did not involve red wine. And it was carried out on mice, not humans. Drinking “plenty of red wine” will not help you to lose weight – if anything, the opposite is true. A standard 750cl bottle of red wine contains around 570 calories, which is more than two McDonald’s hamburgers.
4. E-cigarettes ‘95% less harmful than smoking’ says report
“E-cigarettes are 95% less harmful than tobacco and could be prescribed on the NHS in future to help smokers quit,” BBC News reported. This was the main finding of an evidence review carried out by Public Health England published in August. Once e-cigarettes are regulated as medical products – which is expected in 2016 – some brands could be made available on prescription.
3. Is long-term paracetamol use not as safe as we thought?
A review of previous observational studies carried out in March found that long-term use of paracetamol was linked to an increased risk of adverse events such as heart attacks, gastrointestinal bleeds (bleeding inside the digestive system) and impaired kidney function. While the increase in risk was small, the fact the drug is used by millions means further investigation is required.
2. Media dementia scare over hay fever and sleep drugs
Another drug scare from January saw claims being made that a class of over-the-counter drugs known as anticholinergics, which are used to treat allergies and muscle cramps, increased the risk of dementia. However, the risk only seemed to be associated with people taking these types of drugs daily on a long-term basis.
1. Minor ailment scheme doesn’t provide free Calpol for all
The most popular news story of the year, attracting more than 100,000 views, was triggered by a Facebook post that quickly went viral, where a mother claimed that all medicines are free under the minor ailments scheme. But, like a lot of Facebook content, it was complete nonsense: the NHS does not provide free Calpol to all parents. Liquid paracetamol (brands other than Calpol are available) may be given at the pharmacist’s discretion to parents who have registered with the scheme.
Edited by NHS Choices. Follow NHS Choices on Twitter. Join theHealthy Evidence forum.
New study highlights feelings of isolation in people with Alzheimer’s
Adam Smith
A new report from the Alzheimer’s Society has shed light on the feelings of isolation that are commonly felt by people with dementia.
The charity’s survey of 300 people affected by dementia indicated that 64 per cent of those living with the condition felt isolated from friends and family following a diagnosis, with 54 per cent of people saying they were no longer taking part in any – or hardly any – social activities.
Despite this, 42 per cent of members of the general public stated a mistaken belief that dementia patients do not benefit much from visiting, due to the fact that many individuals with Alzheimer’s have memory impairments that prevent them from recognising their loved ones.
However, 41 per cent of acknowledged that being unable to recognise close friends and family would make them feel most isolated, while 68 per cent say they would still visit someone with dementia who no longer recognised them, either just as much or even more often than they do now.
Meanwhile, 48 per cent of those with dementia said that what would help them most to stay connected is seeing family and friends more often, while 51 per cent said having someone to help them take part in activities and hobbies would be of greatest benefit.
Jeremy Hughes, chief executive of the Alzheimer’s Society, said: “New Year can be a bleak and lonely time for people with dementia and their carers. It’s so important for people with dementia to feel connected throughout the year.
“Spending time with loved ones and taking part in meaningful activities can have a powerful and positive impact, even if they don’t remember the event itself.”
Although many people with dementia find it difficult to recognise the faces of friends and family members, they will often still hold an emotional memory of their meeting, meaning they will continue to feel happy long after a visit or experience of which they may have forgotten the details.
Charity launches retro arcade-style game to explain science of Alzheimer’s
Adam Smith
Alzheimer’s Research UK has created a cross-platform game designed to help people understand the biology of Alzheimer’s and other dementias.
Alzheimer’s Research UK report highlights impact of dementia for carers
ARUK News
Actress Phyllida Law tells of challenges of caring for her mother: ‚ÄúYou couldn’t leave the house‚Äù
New guidelines on end of life care published by NICE
NHS Choices
“NICE urges doctors to treat dying patients as individuals,” BBC News reports. The headline is prompted by the publication of new guidelines from the National Institute for Health and Care Excellence (NICE) on end of life care.
The guidelines are designed to replace the controversial Liverpool Care Pathway, which was phased out in 2014.
New Support for Care Home Research – Meeting Prime Ministers Dementia 2020 vision
Adam Smith
The National Institute for Health Research (NIHR) Enabling Research in Care Homes (ENRICH) Programme has today launched the latest update to its highly regarded care home research toolkit. Since its launch in 2011 the toolkit has attracted over 35,000 users and this latest version updates guidance and includes new features such as a community blog, online training tool and information on funding opportunities. Support for care home research is also being boosted by the addition of Community Integrated Care, one of Britain’s largest social care charities, to the ENRICH Programme, and a new care home research funding call from the NIHR Health Services and Delivery Research Programme (HS&DR).
The West Midlands has been ENRICHED
Sandra Prew
12 months ago an ENRICH Coordinator was appointed for 0.2 WTE to support the roll out of ENRICH across the West Midlands.
Researchers investigate the ‘pathways of pain’
NHS Choices
“Breakthrough could lead to ‘super painkillers’,” the Mail Online reports.