Sunday 22 April 2012

Over £100 million given to support groundbreaking clinical research


Over £100m will be invested in NHS clinical research facilities to develop new treatments to benefit thousands of patients.
The money, provided by the National Institute for Health Research, will be spent on research nurses and technicians at 19 of the facilities around the country. A huge number of new treatments for conditions including cancer, diabetes, stroke, dementia and obesity will be developed by researchers at the facilities.
Some of the funding will also be used to conduct research into rare diseases. The first ever UK consultation on Rare Diseases was published yesterday which outlines how we can build on our strengths through improved co-ordination of services, stronger research and better engagement with patients and their families.
Bidding for funding
NHS Trusts and Foundation Trusts with clinical research facilities submitted bids for the funding, which were judged by a panel of UK experts in both medical research and in running clinical research facilities. Winning bids were selected on the basis of the quality and volume of world-class medical research they support as well as other criteria including the strength of their partnerships with universities and industry.

NICE Clinical Guideline on Spasticity in Children and Young People


The clinical guideline on Spasticity in children and young people is now out for a pre-publication check of factual errors and the closing date for comments will be 5pm on 10th May 2012.

Please note: The pre-publication check is not a second consultation or an opportunity to reopen issues highlighted during consultation on the draft guidelines.  The GDG will already have considered these issues in forming the recommendations contained in the draft for the pre-publication check.

Below is the relevant link where you will find all the instructions and documents needed to make your comments:


If you have any comments, please contact the Secretariat who will pass all comments onto NICE on behalf of BAPO.  Please complete all responses are provided using the pre-publication comments form (ensuring all relevant fields are completed, including your organisation’s full name) and forward this electronically by 5pm on the 3th May 2012 to: enquiries@bapo.com 

Health Education England bulletin launched


The Health Education England transition team has launched its first bulletin to start providing regular updates on the development of the new organisation.
The bulletin is available on a new HEE transition website. 

Guidance for staff facing proposals to change pay terms and conditions


New joint NHS trade unions guidance has been published to help RCN activists resist local proposals to cut NHS pay, terms and conditions.
This advice has been agreed by all NHS trade unions nationally and is designed to help regional and local trade union representatives deal with similar proposals by NHS employing organisations.

QIPP Long Term Conditions


Early implementers are being invited to apply to test a potential new way of funding long-term conditions care. The LTC year of care funding model will be tested by six early implementer sites and prescribes a set approach for the purpose of national evaluation.
The model is described in Quality, Innovation, Productivity and Prevention Long TermConditions which is published along side an application form and supporting guidance for those interested in becoming early implementers.
The deadline for applications is Friday 25 May 2012. QIPP long term conditions is aimed at health and social care commissioners and providers who are implementing integrated LTC care services to improve outcomes and people’s experience. 

Friday 20 April 2012

A new series of guides giving practical advice to CCGs about the value of patient and public engagement is out today

The first four in a series of 10 Smart Guides to Engagement cover the social and economic benefits, dealing with LINks and local HealthWatch, and the role of lay members and patient representatives on CCG boards. The guides have been co-produced by PPE experts from several organisations with support from the Department of Health. Domain 2 of the CCG authorisation process requires evidence of “meaningful engagement with patients, carers and communities”. The guides are available to download from NHS Networks where CCGs are also invited to leave feedback.

Sunday 15 April 2012

Diabetes foot care report shows £650m cost of ulcers and amputations


A new report published by NHS Diabetes sets out the shocking cost to both patients and the NHS of poor quality diabetic foot care.
The report shows that around £650 million is spent on foot ulcers or amputations each year. It also highlights the devastating consequences of foot problems in people with diabetes. Around 7% of people with diabetes currently have, or have had, a foot ulcer, which can lead to amputation.

NHS Diabetes is calling on the NHS to set up specialist diabetes foot care teams as a matter of urgency. Foot care multi disciplinary teams (MDTs) can generate savings for the NHS that substantially outweigh the cost of the team. 

Thursday 29 March 2012

BLESMA Fund Raising

A number of British Association of Prosthetists and Orthotists (BAPO) members are enduring blisters and strict training regimes to train for the London Marathon on the 22 April 2012 all in aid to raise money for British Limbless Ex-Service Men's Association (BLESMA).

If you want to see what motivates some of these members, please go to their Just Giving website links below:


2012 Olympic Paralympic Games


The Opening Ceremony of the 2012 Olympic Paralympic Games is on Wednesday, 29 August 2012.

The BBC intend to broadcast 25 hours of broadcast including commentary and analysis on 5 live.

There are 2 million tickets to attend events costing between £10 and £45.

There are 20 sports on the lineup for London 2012 Paralympics including, Archery, Cycling, Judo, Football, Sailing, Shooting and Basketball to mention a few.  Athletics is by far the biggest sport on the programme with 1,100 athletes competing for 170 gold medals.

Have you managed to get tickets to the Paralympic Games or are you even attending to help out?  Post your thoughts about the events, venues, and athletes below.

A new NHS pension scheme


Does the new NHS pension scheme affect you?  Tell us how you feel by commenting below.

The key facts in the proposals for a new NHS pension

Scheme are:

The proposed pension scheme will not be introduced before April 2015.

•           All pension rights earned in the NHS pension scheme up to that point will
be unaffected and based on your final salary when you retire. No-one will
            lose any pension entitlements that they have already built up.
•           If you are within ten years of your pension age you will not be moving to the
new scheme and will get the same pension you would have done at your
chosen retirement age.
•           If you are within thirteen years and five months of normal pension age, your
pension is partially protected – so you will remain on the current
arrangements for a longer period.
•           The new pension scheme from 2015 will continue to provide what is called
‘defined scheme related benefits’ – this is different to the ‘defined
contribution’ schemes which are now common in the private sector and
often more risky.
•           Those defined scheme related benefits will be based on your average
earnings over the course of your NHS career rather than your final salary.
•           The annual rate of pension accrual for the new scheme will be 1/54ths of
pensionable earnings each year with no limit to your service – this is the
rate at which you build up pension benefits. This is a better accrual rate for
your pension than you get at the moment.
•           Employee pension contributions – what you pay into your pension – is
based on a full-time salary and will increase by an average of 3.2
percentage points over 3 years from April 2012. The 630,000 NHS staff
who earn less than £26,557 on a full-time equivalent basis will not pay any
extra into their pension in 2012/13 and there will be consultation on the
proposals for subsequent years.
•           Most NHS Trades Unions and NHS Employers have stated that they
believe that this final proposal represents the best that can be achieved
through discussions.


Rigid Footplate Shows Advantages Over AFO for Idiopathic Toe Walking

Rigid Footplate Shows Advantages Over AFO for Idiopathic Toe Walking

Many of us would see habitual toe walkers within our everyday clinics.  What's your preference of treatment and why?