The Times - UK (2022-06-08)

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12 2GM Wednesday June 8 2022 | the times


News


Sajid Javid has labelled the NHS a
“Blockbuster healthcare system in the
age of Netflix” and vowed to introduce
the “biggest shake-up in health and
social care leadership in a generation”.
Speaking before the publication of a
review of the NHS by General Sir
Gordon Messenger, Javid, the health
secretary, said “it was no longer simply
an option to stick to the status quo”.
The review highlights “institutional
inadequacy” in leadership, and recom-
mends that appraisals take into account
behaviour as well as achievements.
Javid said he would accept all the
review’s recommendations. “The find-
ings in this report are stark. It shows ex-
amples of great leadership but also
where we need to urgently improve,” he
said. “We must only accept the highest
standards in health and care — culture
and leadership can be the difference
between life and death.”
Good NHS leaders will be offered
golden handshakes to move to


trusts in roles covering “equality, diver-
sity and inclusion”, up from 78 last year.
Javid also likened the NHS to the
defunct video rental store Blockbuster
operating in a world dominated by Net-
flix and other streaming services.
Javid later told the health select com-
mittee: “I have talked many times about
the importance of modernising the
NHS. The NHS is absolutely fantastic,
we all rely on it, but much of how it’s set

Black and Asian nurses miss out on
promotion because of “endemic” NHS
racism, according to a report.
The Royal College of Nursing (RCN)
said its “deeply shocking” research
revealed that white nurses were twice
as likely as their ethnic minority col-
leagues to get promoted.
The report, which was based on a
survey of 10,000 nurses, found that
white nurses across all age groups were


Black and Asian nurses missing out on promotion


most likely to receive a promotion. The
difference was most stark among those
aged between 35 and 44, according to
the report published at the RCN’s
annual congress in Glasgow. It said 66
per cent of white or mixed-race nurses
in this age group had been promoted
since starting their career, compared
with 38 per cent of Asian and 35 per
cent of black respondents.
The survey also found that racism
and abuse was having a devastating
impact on ethnic minority staff. Black

nurses working in hospitals and in the
community were more likely to have
experienced physical abuse than those
of other ethnic backgrounds. Asian and
black nurses were also more likely to be
unpaid for their additional work than
respondents from a mixed-race or
white background.
The college called on the govern-
ment to take urgent action to tackle
structural racism within healthcare. It
said this should include a legal require-
ment to eliminate racial disparities in

recruitment and career progression.
Saffron Cordery, deputy chief executive
of NHS Providers, said: “These impor-
tant findings are the latest in a long
string of evidence highlighting the un-
acceptable presence of structural
racism within our health and care
system.
“With the NHS facing a workforce
crisis, it has never been more important
to ensure that the NHS is a safe and fair
place to work for all its staff, regardless
of their protected characteristics.”

Eleanor Hayward Health Correspondent


In the age of Netflix the NHS is


more like Blockbuster, says Javid


Kat Lay Health Editor struggling trusts, as part of support
packages to make sure “roles in chal-
lenged areas are seen as the best jobs
rather than the most feared jobs”.
A new induction programme will
instil “collective responsibility at every
level” for health and social care staff.
Last September, when briefing Tory
MPs about the national insurance rise
for health and social care, Javid said he
would be “watchful for any waste or
wokery” from the NHS.
Following the publication of the re-
port last night, he said: “In my view,
there are already too many working in
roles focused solely on diversity and
inclusion — and, at a time when our
constituents are facing real pressures
around cost of living, we must spend
every penny on patients’ priorities.
“As this report sets out, it should be
the responsibility of everyone to
encourage fairness and equality of
opportunity, which is why we must
reduce the number of these roles.”
The Daily Mail reported that 155 staff
were employed across 40 acute NHS


up is still very much 1948. We need to be
thinking about... how we get from here
to the needs of the British population
when it comes to health in 2048.”
Messenger’s review said that in parts
of the health system, “acceptance of dis-
crimination, bullying, blame cultures
and responsibility avoidance has
almost become normalised”. He said:
“My conclusion from that is that it is a
symptom of the pressures that exist in
the workplace. But it’s also a symptom
that an understanding of what are
acceptable behaviours ... isn’t perhaps
consistently applied across the board.”
Messenger said a focus on targets
alone created pressures that corroded
the atmosphere at work and harmed
patients or service users. “A number of
times since I started this review. I’ve
seen negative outcomes as a result of
over-fixation on metrics and targets.”
The review, also led by Dame Linda
Pollard, chairwoman of Leeds Teach-
ing Hospital Trust, was commissioned
last October and will be shared with
parliament today.

The NHS workforce


Professionally qualified clinical staff

Support to clinical staff

Managers

Other

645,

376,

35,

163,

Data for full-time
equivalent staff
Source: NHS England

There were 35,000 managers and
senior managers employed by the
NHS in January 2022

Doctors must


alert councils


to monkeypox


Rhys Blakely Science Correspondent

Doctors in England will be required to
notify their local council if they suspect
a patient has monkeypox, under new
regulations aimed at curbing the spread
of the disease.
Laboratories will also have to notify
the UK Health Security Agency
(UKHSA) if they identify the virus in
any sample that is analysed.
The requirements will come into
effect today after legislation was intro-
duced to make monkeypox one of
several dozen “notifiable diseases”.
As of Sunday, 302 cases had been
detected in the UK, with 287 in
England, ten in Scotland, two in North-
ern Ireland and three in Wales.
The UKHSA has said that the risk
posed by monkeypox to the general
population remains low because the
virus does not spread easily.
The agency said last week that
investigations have identified that the
virus has links in the UK and abroad to
gay bars, saunas and the use of dating
apps. “Investigations continue but
currently no single factor or exposure
that links the cases has been identified,”
it added.
The first British monkeypox patient
to speak to the media criticised the UK
Health Security Agency claiming that
the body responsible for tracking and
tracing the contagious virus did not
contact him until he spoke out.
James McFadzean, 35, who was diag-
nosed on May 28, told TalkTV: “Funni-
ly enough, (the UKHSA did not contact
me) until 10 minutes ago after my story
broke... That kind of seems farcical
because every day I’ve been calling my
clinic, trying to get someone to call me
so we can do contract tracing so we can
identify other people at risk.”

Garden of Eden Fifty thousand blooms have been used to produce 60 flower arrangements at the Festival of Flowers in Chichester Cathedral, which opens today


ANDREW MATTHEWS/PA

Anorexia may


badly shrink


parts of brain


Tom Whipple Science Editor

People with anorexia have “sizeable re-
ductions” in parts of the brain, accord-
ing to a study of 2,000 sufferers.
One of the researchers involved said
that the work — the largest of its kind
— should be a “wake-up call” showing
that people with the eating disorder
needed early intervention.
“The brain changes were more
severe than in any other psychiatric
condition we have studied,” said Paul
Thompson, professor of neurology at
the University of Southern California.
However, the study showed that
those recovering from anorexia ap-
peared to experience some reversal,
suggesting changes are not permanent.
The findings, published in the journal
Biological Psychiatry, appeared to show
that the condition, which affects a
quarter of a million Britons, was asso-
ciated with larger structural differences
in the brain than conditions such as
depression, ADHD or OCD, possibly
because of the physiological effects of
starvation.
Dr Esther Walton, from the Univers-
ity of Bath and the lead researcher on
the study, said: “We found that the large
reductions in brain structure were less
noticeable in patients on the path to re-
covery. With the right treatment, the
brain might be able to bounce back.”
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