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Mashup Score: 4Valuable but immeasurable - 9 day(s) ago
People who matter aren’t always easy to quantify
Source: kucharski.substack.comCategories: General Medicine News, Critical CareTweet
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Mashup Score: 6Delivering trials in the NHS: more than worth it - PubMed - 12 day(s) ago
Randomised trials are the best method to determine the efficacy and safety of health technologies. A recent report by Lord O’Shaughnessy highlighted many of the current challenges to delivering trials in the UK and proposed potential solutions. Among these, making trials the business of all NHS inst …
Source: pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.govCategories: General Medicine News, Critical CareTweet
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Mashup Score: 1Political tensions weaken battle against biggest diseases, warns health charity chief - 13 day(s) ago
Wellcome’s John-Arne Røttingen says divisions risk harming action on pandemic responses and ‘superbugs’
Source: www.ft.comCategories: General Medicine News, Critical CareTweet
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Mashup Score: 3
Preliminary outbreak assessment for influenza A (H5N1) of avian origin in domestic livestock in the USA.
Source: www.gov.ukCategories: General Medicine News, Critical CareTweet
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Mashup Score: 12Programme Manager, Cambridge-GSK Translational Immunology Collaboration (CG-TIC) - Job Opportunities - University of Cambridge - 15 day(s) ago
Programme Manager, Cambridge-GSK Translational Immunology Collaboration (CG-TIC) in the Department of Medicine at the University of Cambridge.
Source: www.jobs.cam.ac.ukCategories: General Medicine News, Critical CareTweet
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Mashup Score: 27NHS England » Improving the working lives of doctors in training - 17 day(s) ago
There is no NHS without the people who work in it, and those people are working incredibly hard to deliver a huge and growing amount for our patients. While this commitment extends to improving the working lives of our entire workforce, it is evident from conversations with doctors in training that we collectively need to do better for them. The negotiations with Government about pay are not within our remit, but as the people responsible for training and employing doctors in training, there is much more
Source: www.england.nhs.ukCategories: General Medicine News, Critical CareTweet
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Mashup Score: 27NHS England » Improving the working lives of doctors in training - 20 day(s) ago
There is no NHS without the people who work in it, and those people are working incredibly hard to deliver a huge and growing amount for our patients. While this commitment extends to improving the working lives of our entire workforce, it is evident from conversations with doctors in training that we collectively need to do better for them. The negotiations with Government about pay are not within our remit, but as the people responsible for training and employing doctors in training, there is much more
Source: www.england.nhs.ukCategories: General Medicine News, Critical CareTweet
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Mashup Score: 10GP Clinical Academic Fellowships set to grow ‘future leaders’ | NHS Research Scotland | NHS Research Scotland - 23 day(s) ago
The GP Clinical Academic Fellowships are now open for applications The fellowships are designed to help newly qualified GPs gain an understandi
Source: www.nhsresearchscotland.org.ukCategories: General Medicine News, Critical CareTweet
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Mashup Score: 12Programme Manager, Cambridge-GSK Translational Immunology Collaboration (CG-TIC) - Job Opportunities - University of Cambridge - 25 day(s) ago
Programme Manager, Cambridge-GSK Translational Immunology Collaboration (CG-TIC) in the Department of Medicine at the University of Cambridge.
Source: www.jobs.cam.ac.ukCategories: General Medicine News, Critical CareTweet
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Mashup Score: 35Why hospital capacity is more complex than bed capacity - 26 day(s) ago
It’s easy and somewhat commonplace to liken healthcare to a widget factory, to boil it down to inputs and outputs; to capacity, productivity, and efficiency. I was reminded of this at last week’s international quality and safety forum, jointly hosted by BMJ and the Institute for Healthcare Improvement. The event was held at the ExCel, London’s homage to the austere corridor world of Blake’s 7 —and the site of a Nightingale hospital at the height of the covid pandemic. The Nightingale hospital was assembled in rapid time and added to hospital bed capacity. But that extra bed capacity went unused, because hospital capacity isn’t just about beds. It also requires, for example, trained staff and appropriate equipment. Counting the number of beds alone, it turns out, isn’t especially …
Source: www.bmj.comCategories: General Medicine News, Critical CareTweet
A great blog from @adamjkucharski about the need for us to find better ways to value team contributions in sport and science. Valuable but immeasurable https://t.co/di6QEohHdM