Volunteering in acute trusts in England infographicsThe King's Fund
Our new set of infographics looks at volunteering in acute trusts in England – including the important roles volunteers play, the variation in the number of volunteers between trusts and volunteering growth in future.
These infographics are for you to use and share – please just mention The King's Fund when you do so.
The document discusses challenges in teaching statistics to psychology students and proposes different approaches to address these challenges. It notes that statistics is difficult for psychology students to understand and different lecturers have their own preferred teaching styles. It also suggests that students learn in different ways and some textbook explanations are clearer than others. To optimize learning, it proposes matching a student's learning style with how the topic is taught. Finally, it recommends finding existing open educational resources on teaching statistics, classifying them by teaching approach, and having students self-assess which style best matches their learning through sampled materials.
Ailsa Claire: Meeting the information needs of clinical commissioning groupsThe King's Fund
The document discusses the information needs of clinical commissioning groups to support patient choice, clinical decision making, and efficient healthcare delivery. It outlines that clinical commissioning groups will require integrated patient-level data, risk stratification tools, and timely financial and activity information. The document also emphasizes establishing national data standards and contractual obligations around data sharing to enable effective commissioning.
Rachael Addicott on commissioning end-of-life careThe King's Fund
Rachael Addicott, senior fellow at The King's Fund, presents early findings from her ongoing research into effective commissioning of services at the end of life, along with case studies of innovation and best practice.
David Oliver: Making services fit for an ageing populationThe King's Fund
David Oliver, National Clinical Director for Older People at the Department of Health, discusses population ageing and attitudes to it, what older people and carers want and the solutions to providing better care.
Bernie Cuthel: incentivising more and better care in the communityThe King's Fund
Bernie Cuthel shares how Liverpool Community Health have developed the ‘Proactive care programme’ to help reduce health inequalities, increase life expectancy and enable patients to take control of their long-term conditions in Anfield. The innovative programme involves using primary care data, risk stratifying patients and using a multi-disciplinary team to produce a proactive care plan.
The document summarizes the findings and recommendations of the Commission on the Future of Health and Social Care in England. It identifies three key problems with the current system: it is unfair, funding is separate between health and social care, and services are not well coordinated. The Commission recommends a new system that 1) commissions health and social care together, 2) simplifies access and increases personal control, and 3) increases free social care provision over time. However, these changes would require more funding. The Commission believes the costs can be covered through tax increases focused on those who can afford to pay more, and that the reformed system would be more efficient and achieve better outcomes.
Volunteering in acute trusts in England infographicsThe King's Fund
Our new set of infographics looks at volunteering in acute trusts in England – including the important roles volunteers play, the variation in the number of volunteers between trusts and volunteering growth in future.
These infographics are for you to use and share – please just mention The King's Fund when you do so.
The document discusses challenges in teaching statistics to psychology students and proposes different approaches to address these challenges. It notes that statistics is difficult for psychology students to understand and different lecturers have their own preferred teaching styles. It also suggests that students learn in different ways and some textbook explanations are clearer than others. To optimize learning, it proposes matching a student's learning style with how the topic is taught. Finally, it recommends finding existing open educational resources on teaching statistics, classifying them by teaching approach, and having students self-assess which style best matches their learning through sampled materials.
Ailsa Claire: Meeting the information needs of clinical commissioning groupsThe King's Fund
The document discusses the information needs of clinical commissioning groups to support patient choice, clinical decision making, and efficient healthcare delivery. It outlines that clinical commissioning groups will require integrated patient-level data, risk stratification tools, and timely financial and activity information. The document also emphasizes establishing national data standards and contractual obligations around data sharing to enable effective commissioning.
Rachael Addicott on commissioning end-of-life careThe King's Fund
Rachael Addicott, senior fellow at The King's Fund, presents early findings from her ongoing research into effective commissioning of services at the end of life, along with case studies of innovation and best practice.
David Oliver: Making services fit for an ageing populationThe King's Fund
David Oliver, National Clinical Director for Older People at the Department of Health, discusses population ageing and attitudes to it, what older people and carers want and the solutions to providing better care.
Bernie Cuthel: incentivising more and better care in the communityThe King's Fund
Bernie Cuthel shares how Liverpool Community Health have developed the ‘Proactive care programme’ to help reduce health inequalities, increase life expectancy and enable patients to take control of their long-term conditions in Anfield. The innovative programme involves using primary care data, risk stratifying patients and using a multi-disciplinary team to produce a proactive care plan.
The document summarizes the findings and recommendations of the Commission on the Future of Health and Social Care in England. It identifies three key problems with the current system: it is unfair, funding is separate between health and social care, and services are not well coordinated. The Commission recommends a new system that 1) commissions health and social care together, 2) simplifies access and increases personal control, and 3) increases free social care provision over time. However, these changes would require more funding. The Commission believes the costs can be covered through tax increases focused on those who can afford to pay more, and that the reformed system would be more efficient and achieve better outcomes.
International digital health and care congress 2014 - Breakouts: Friday, Sess...The King's Fund
Breakout sessions on Friday included various presentations on using digital tools to aid prevention, rehabilitation, and decision making for medical professionals. Specific topics included a stroke association self-help tool, improving an online diabetes risk score, apps to support nursing homes and end-of-life care, image sharing apps for clinicians, touch surgery simulation, cognitive support technology for aging, and using apps and mobile devices to direct specialist care and support behavior change for long-term conditions.
Contracting to deliver integrated care closer to patients: GPs as both provid...The King's Fund
The document discusses integrating care delivery through GPs acting as both providers and commissioners of services. It proposes that a mid-Surrey commissioning group take on a managed care contract to make or buy diagnostics, planned, and unplanned adult care for their registered population. This would make practices both clinically and financially responsible for delivering these services. The benefits would include funds to develop community-based services in real time under a capped risk model.
Mike Attwood at The King's Fund Annual Conference 2010The King's Fund
Mike Attwood, Programme Director, Total Place Coventry talks about whole area approaches to providing public services at The King's Fund Annual Conference 2010.
Giles Wilmore: How will the NHS Information Strategy support the new NHS?The King's Fund
Giles Wilmore, Director of Quality Framework and QIPP, Department of Health, discusses the NHS Information Strategy at The King's Fund's NHS Information Revolution conference.
Linking Staff Wellbeing and Patient Experience The King's Fund
Staff wellbeing is linked to patient experience and organizational success. It includes both short and long-term emotional, psychological, and physical health as well as work performance. High demands, low control, and poor support at work can lead to stress and negatively impact motivation, absenteeism, and job performance. Ensuring staff wellbeing requires prioritizing it over short-term concerns, implementing team-based interventions, and developing a culture where staff feel valued and supported. Measuring current wellbeing, developing evidence-based interventions, and evaluating their impact can help organizations improve both staff effectiveness and patient outcomes.
Peter Hay: Making links with GPs: influencing commissioningThe King's Fund
Peter Hay, President, Association of Directors of Adult Social Services (ADASS), looks at the role of integrated commissioning in the new health economy.
Theresa Hegarty: using patient, carer and staff stories to improve patient ex...The King's Fund
Theresa Hegarty, Head of Patient Experience at Royal United Hospital Bath NHS Trust, explains why storytelling is a powerful method for improving the experience of patients, staff and carers.
Robert Chote: Public finances and health careThe King's Fund
Robert Chote, Chairman of the Office for Budget Responsibility (OBR), shares the results of the OBR’s 2012 Fiscal Sustainability report, with a specific focus on health care spending.
The document discusses the origins of online video as a new business model, tracing it back to Apple Computer releasing high quality weekly video trailers in the late 1990s. As DSL connections and speeds increased in the early 2000s, more tech startups emerged in Silicon Valley, including Google. YouTube later became popular due to offering larger, higher resolution copyright-free videos and using viral marketing techniques, appealing to consumers rather than just producers. The key was providing a large amount and variety of videos rather than high image quality alone.
Commission on the Future of Health and Social Care in England infographicsThe King's Fund
With health and social care services facing unprecedented challenges, are the current arrangements fit for purpose?
Our new set of infographics considers how people's health and social care needs might change in the future, and looks at the facts and figures behind health and social care spending.
Clustering of unhealthy behaviours over time: implications for policy and pra...The King's Fund
This document discusses a study analyzing trends in multiple unhealthy lifestyle behaviors in England over time. The study found:
1) Overall improvements from 2003 to 2008, with a 20% drop in people exhibiting 3-4 risky behaviors, however 70% still had 2+ risks.
2) Most improvements came from higher socioeconomic groups, while risks increased in poorer groups, widening inequalities.
3) Addressing individual behaviors may not be sufficient - an integrated approach targeting people's overall lifestyles is needed, along with more targeted policies to reduce health inequalities.
Leo Lewis: co-ordinating care from the information perspectiveThe King's Fund
Leo Lewis, Senior Fellow at the International Foundation for Integrated Care, draws on experience from the Carmarthenshire Chronic Conditions Demonstrator programme in Wales, to look at the key elements necessary to deliver effective services for people living with, or at risk of developing, chronic conditions.
Paul Johnson, Director of the Institute for Fiscal Studies, gives an overview of how public spending is distributed and where health fits within the total spending picture.
D821 beliefs and evidence presentation 2010 Martin Le Voi and Eileen MansfieldMartin Voi
Here are some ways the different positions discussed could approach ECA topics:
- Positivist: Take a detached, objective view. Form hypotheses and test them empirically through controlled experiments. Aim to establish causal relationships or generalizable laws. Use quantitative methods.
- Interpretivist: Emphasize understanding meaning and experience from participants' perspectives. Consider social and cultural contexts. Use qualitative methods like interviews to explore diverse viewpoints.
- Critical realist: Acknowledge complexity and unseen influences like social structures. Study open systems with many factors. Use mixed methods to explore observable behaviors and underlying realities. Theories cannot be decisively proven or falsified.
- Postmodern: Question notions of objective truth and fixed
Eventos Demo for SemTechBiz 2013 (San Francisco)AI4BD GmbH
The document discusses Eventos, a tool that harvests real-time content using semantic fingerprints to filter out irrelevant information. It can be used for CRM and managing scientific papers. The presentation agenda includes an overview of Eventos, a demonstration of how it works, and use cases for CRM and scientific papers. Eventos allows users to create personal categories and receives updates on topics of interest without having to read unrelated content.
Professor Sir Mike Richards CBE, Director for Preventing Early Deaths at the NHS Commissioning Board, looks back at the NHS in the 1990s to see how much progress has been made in improving health outcomes since then.
Chris Ham: capitated budgets - a flexible way to enable new models of careThe King's Fund
Chris Ham, Chief Executive at The King’s Fund, looks at how high performing integrated systems are using capitated budgets and shares examples of eight PCTs who are commissioning integrated care in an innovative way.
Angela Coulter: Getting the best value for patientsThe King's Fund
Dr Angela Coulter, Director of Global Initiatives, Foundation for Informed Medical Decision Making, spoke at The King's Fund's 'Reducing unwarranted variations in health care' conference, giving her expert opinion on how to give the best value for patients: with the right intervention, in the right place, at the right time with the right level of involvement.
Nicholas Timmins: The shifting nature of the health and social care funding d...The King's Fund
Should the settlement of health and social care in England be re-shaped? And if so, how? Nicholas Timmins looks at the shifting nature of the funding divide in England's health and social care systems, from pre-NHS to the current day. Find out more at: www.kingsfund.org.uk/commission
Anne Eden, Chief Executive, Buckinghamshire Healthcare NHS Trust, explores the role that hospitals can play in delivering integrated care. Using examples of her team's work in Buckinghamshire, including their integrated stroke programme, she highlights the benefits to patients and the value of developing an integrated care pathway.
International digital health and care congress 2014 - Breakouts: Friday, Sess...The King's Fund
Breakout sessions on Friday included various presentations on using digital tools to aid prevention, rehabilitation, and decision making for medical professionals. Specific topics included a stroke association self-help tool, improving an online diabetes risk score, apps to support nursing homes and end-of-life care, image sharing apps for clinicians, touch surgery simulation, cognitive support technology for aging, and using apps and mobile devices to direct specialist care and support behavior change for long-term conditions.
Contracting to deliver integrated care closer to patients: GPs as both provid...The King's Fund
The document discusses integrating care delivery through GPs acting as both providers and commissioners of services. It proposes that a mid-Surrey commissioning group take on a managed care contract to make or buy diagnostics, planned, and unplanned adult care for their registered population. This would make practices both clinically and financially responsible for delivering these services. The benefits would include funds to develop community-based services in real time under a capped risk model.
Mike Attwood at The King's Fund Annual Conference 2010The King's Fund
Mike Attwood, Programme Director, Total Place Coventry talks about whole area approaches to providing public services at The King's Fund Annual Conference 2010.
Giles Wilmore: How will the NHS Information Strategy support the new NHS?The King's Fund
Giles Wilmore, Director of Quality Framework and QIPP, Department of Health, discusses the NHS Information Strategy at The King's Fund's NHS Information Revolution conference.
Linking Staff Wellbeing and Patient Experience The King's Fund
Staff wellbeing is linked to patient experience and organizational success. It includes both short and long-term emotional, psychological, and physical health as well as work performance. High demands, low control, and poor support at work can lead to stress and negatively impact motivation, absenteeism, and job performance. Ensuring staff wellbeing requires prioritizing it over short-term concerns, implementing team-based interventions, and developing a culture where staff feel valued and supported. Measuring current wellbeing, developing evidence-based interventions, and evaluating their impact can help organizations improve both staff effectiveness and patient outcomes.
Peter Hay: Making links with GPs: influencing commissioningThe King's Fund
Peter Hay, President, Association of Directors of Adult Social Services (ADASS), looks at the role of integrated commissioning in the new health economy.
Theresa Hegarty: using patient, carer and staff stories to improve patient ex...The King's Fund
Theresa Hegarty, Head of Patient Experience at Royal United Hospital Bath NHS Trust, explains why storytelling is a powerful method for improving the experience of patients, staff and carers.
Robert Chote: Public finances and health careThe King's Fund
Robert Chote, Chairman of the Office for Budget Responsibility (OBR), shares the results of the OBR’s 2012 Fiscal Sustainability report, with a specific focus on health care spending.
The document discusses the origins of online video as a new business model, tracing it back to Apple Computer releasing high quality weekly video trailers in the late 1990s. As DSL connections and speeds increased in the early 2000s, more tech startups emerged in Silicon Valley, including Google. YouTube later became popular due to offering larger, higher resolution copyright-free videos and using viral marketing techniques, appealing to consumers rather than just producers. The key was providing a large amount and variety of videos rather than high image quality alone.
Commission on the Future of Health and Social Care in England infographicsThe King's Fund
With health and social care services facing unprecedented challenges, are the current arrangements fit for purpose?
Our new set of infographics considers how people's health and social care needs might change in the future, and looks at the facts and figures behind health and social care spending.
Clustering of unhealthy behaviours over time: implications for policy and pra...The King's Fund
This document discusses a study analyzing trends in multiple unhealthy lifestyle behaviors in England over time. The study found:
1) Overall improvements from 2003 to 2008, with a 20% drop in people exhibiting 3-4 risky behaviors, however 70% still had 2+ risks.
2) Most improvements came from higher socioeconomic groups, while risks increased in poorer groups, widening inequalities.
3) Addressing individual behaviors may not be sufficient - an integrated approach targeting people's overall lifestyles is needed, along with more targeted policies to reduce health inequalities.
Leo Lewis: co-ordinating care from the information perspectiveThe King's Fund
Leo Lewis, Senior Fellow at the International Foundation for Integrated Care, draws on experience from the Carmarthenshire Chronic Conditions Demonstrator programme in Wales, to look at the key elements necessary to deliver effective services for people living with, or at risk of developing, chronic conditions.
Paul Johnson, Director of the Institute for Fiscal Studies, gives an overview of how public spending is distributed and where health fits within the total spending picture.
D821 beliefs and evidence presentation 2010 Martin Le Voi and Eileen MansfieldMartin Voi
Here are some ways the different positions discussed could approach ECA topics:
- Positivist: Take a detached, objective view. Form hypotheses and test them empirically through controlled experiments. Aim to establish causal relationships or generalizable laws. Use quantitative methods.
- Interpretivist: Emphasize understanding meaning and experience from participants' perspectives. Consider social and cultural contexts. Use qualitative methods like interviews to explore diverse viewpoints.
- Critical realist: Acknowledge complexity and unseen influences like social structures. Study open systems with many factors. Use mixed methods to explore observable behaviors and underlying realities. Theories cannot be decisively proven or falsified.
- Postmodern: Question notions of objective truth and fixed
Eventos Demo for SemTechBiz 2013 (San Francisco)AI4BD GmbH
The document discusses Eventos, a tool that harvests real-time content using semantic fingerprints to filter out irrelevant information. It can be used for CRM and managing scientific papers. The presentation agenda includes an overview of Eventos, a demonstration of how it works, and use cases for CRM and scientific papers. Eventos allows users to create personal categories and receives updates on topics of interest without having to read unrelated content.
Professor Sir Mike Richards CBE, Director for Preventing Early Deaths at the NHS Commissioning Board, looks back at the NHS in the 1990s to see how much progress has been made in improving health outcomes since then.
Chris Ham: capitated budgets - a flexible way to enable new models of careThe King's Fund
Chris Ham, Chief Executive at The King’s Fund, looks at how high performing integrated systems are using capitated budgets and shares examples of eight PCTs who are commissioning integrated care in an innovative way.
Angela Coulter: Getting the best value for patientsThe King's Fund
Dr Angela Coulter, Director of Global Initiatives, Foundation for Informed Medical Decision Making, spoke at The King's Fund's 'Reducing unwarranted variations in health care' conference, giving her expert opinion on how to give the best value for patients: with the right intervention, in the right place, at the right time with the right level of involvement.
Nicholas Timmins: The shifting nature of the health and social care funding d...The King's Fund
Should the settlement of health and social care in England be re-shaped? And if so, how? Nicholas Timmins looks at the shifting nature of the funding divide in England's health and social care systems, from pre-NHS to the current day. Find out more at: www.kingsfund.org.uk/commission
Anne Eden, Chief Executive, Buckinghamshire Healthcare NHS Trust, explores the role that hospitals can play in delivering integrated care. Using examples of her team's work in Buckinghamshire, including their integrated stroke programme, she highlights the benefits to patients and the value of developing an integrated care pathway.
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