For full details on how to submit a poster for BAPO Conference & Exhibition 2013 please see below, further details at www.bapo.com
The British Association of Prosthetists and Orthotists (BAPO) was established to encourage high standards of prosthetic and orthotic practice. It is committed to Continued Professional Development and education to enhance standards of prosthetic and orthotic care. BAPO is the only UK body that represents the interests of prosthetic and orthotic professionals and associate members to their employers, BAPO enjoys the support of a high majority of the profession as members.
For full details on how to submit a poster for BAPO Conference & Exhibition 2013 please see below, further details at www.bapo.com
Traditionally, amputees have been offered one-size-fits-all prosthetics – functional but not particularly attractive. Now technology is blurring the line between medical devices and sculpture.
http://www.euronews.com/2013/02/13/printed-prosthetics/
NHS services across the country are set to benefit from additional funding to improve prosthetic and rehabilitation services for ex-servicemen and women.
The government is making £11 million available over the next 2 years to ensure veterans are able to access a high level of prosthetic and rehabilitation care.
Nine NHS facilities across the country will receive a share of up to £6.7 million of the funding. They will be able to use this specifically to access the latest technology and provide the highest quality of prosthetic care for veteran amputees. The centres are:
Other services will benefit too, with a £1million fund to ensure that all prosthetics services across England improve. The remainder will go towards providing prosthetics.
Announcing the funding, Health Minister Dr Dan Poulter said:
"Ex-servicemen and women who have been injured in the line of duty deserve the very best possible care from the NHS. This is why we are making more funding available to improve veterans' prosthetic limb services – and £22 million in total between 2010 and 2015 to support veterans' physical and mental health.
"We want to ensure that our Armed Forces veterans have access to the very best healthcare services at specialist prosthetic and rehabilitation centres across the country. In time, these NHS centres will achieve the same high standards of care for veterans that are offered by Armed Forces rehabilitation centres, such as Headley Court."
Today's announcement is in response to recommendations made by Dr Andrew Murrison MP in a report, commissioned by the Prime Minister, about the provision of prosthetics for military amputees.
Dr Murrison recommended that a small number of multi-disciplinary centres should provide specialist prosthetic and rehabilitation services in England to ensure veterans have access to a similar, high quality of care to that which the Armed Forces provides.
Dr Jeff Lindsay, a Consultant in Amputee Rehabilitation at the West Midlands Rehabilitation Centre, Birmingham Community Healthcare NHS Trust, said:
"Our aim is for ex-service men and women to maintain their level of independence, function and capabilities as they move from the military into civilian life.
"The additional funding will enable us to offer the highest possible standards of prosthetic provision and care for these brave men and women, as they leave the armed forces and their care is transferred to the NHS.
"Furthermore, the additional funding will help to enhance both the knowledge and skills of our expert staff and improve available facilities for the benefit all patients, both ex-servicemen and women and civilians alike."
The additional funding and improvements that this will bring will mean that civilian amputees will also be able to benefit from advanced care in centres across the NHS in England.
The NHS Commissioning Board will work with military charities and the NHS to finalise the amount each service will receive.
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At the Annual General Meeting in Telford on 23 March 2013 the elections for Executive Committee members will take place.
Three members of the committee have or will stand down, namely: Nigel Jones, John Head and Suzanne Faulkner. One member wishes to stand for election, namely: Nicola Eddison. The following members will remain on the committee; Steve Mottram, Jonathan Bull, Pamela Coulton, Sandie Waddell, Ian Jones and Paul Charlton thus nominations are invited for four vacancies.
A nominee must be a fully paid up Full Member and their nomination must be proposed and seconded by two current Full Members of the Association.
Nominations should be signed by the nominee, proposer and seconder. A summary of no more than 100 words should be attached, indicating:
· who the nominee is
· what they have done for the profession
· why they wish to be elected
· and how they see the profession and the Association going in the next two years
This should be addressed to the Secretary at the BAPO Secretariat to arrive by Friday 8 February 2013 (extended deadline date). It would be appreciated if nominations could be sent in as soon as possible.
The NHS should go paperless by 2018 to save billions, improve services and help meet the challenges of an ageing population, Health Secretary Jeremy Hunt will say today. In a … Read more → - Jeremy Hunt challenges NHS to go paperless by 2018
J. Dawson, I. Boller, H. Doll, G. Lavis, R. Sharp, P. Cooke, and C. Jenkinson J Bone Joint Surg Br 2012;94-B 215-221
Quote: The responsiveness of the Manchester–Oxford Foot Questionnaire (MOXFQ) was compared with foot/ankle-specific and generic outcome measures used to assess all surgery of the foot and ankle. We recruited 671 consecutive adult patients awaiting foot or ankle surgery, of whom 427 (63.6%) were female, with a mean age of 52.8 years (18 to 89). They independently completed the MOXFQ, Short-Form 36 (SF-36) and EuroQol (EQ-5D) questionnaires pre-operatively and at a mean of nine months (3.8 to 14.4) post-operatively. Foot/ankle surgeons assessed American Orthopaedic Foot and Ankle Society (AOFAS) scores corresponding to four foot/ankle regions. A transition item measured perceived changes in foot/ankle problems post-surgery. Of 628 eligible patients proceeding to surgery, 491 (78%) completed questionnaires and 262 (42%) received clinical assessments both pre- and post-operatively. The regions receiving surgery were: multiple/whole foot in eight (1.3%), ankle/hindfoot in 292 (46.5%), mid-foot in 21 (3.3%), hallux in 196 (31.2%), and lesser toes in 111 (17.7%). Foot/ankle-specific MOXFQ, AOFAS and EQ-5D domains produced larger effect sizes (> 0.8) than any SF-36 domains, suggesting superior responsiveness. In analyses that anchored change in scores and effect sizes to patients' responses to a transition item about their foot/ankle problems, the MOXFQ performed well. The SF-36 and EQ-5D performed poorly. Similar analyses, conducted within foot-region based sub-groups of patients, found that the responsiveness of the MOXFQ was good compared with the AOFAS.
This evidence supports the MOXFQ's suitability for assessing all foot and ankle surgery.
Ex-paratrooper Tom Neathway lost both legs and an arm in an explosion in Afghanistan but is tackling this grueling 5,000-mile race across South America.
This is the 34th edition of the race, which started in Lima on January 4 and ends in Chile on January 20.
There is the fund-raising side. Tom will be raising hopefully £1million for Help For Heroes and Tedworth House, one of the five recovery centres set up in partnership between the Ministry of Defence, Help for Heroes and the Royal British Legion.
Source: http://www.mirror.co.uk/sport/other-sports/dakar-rally-2013-preview-tom-1519172#comments
Mark Cahill, who is 51, had been unable to use his right hand after it was affected by gout.
This procedure allowed very accurate restoration of nerve structures and is believed to be the first time this approach has been used, surgeons said.
Consultant plastic surgeon Professor Simon Kay, who led the surgical team, said: "This operation is the culmination of a great deal of planning and preparation over the last two years by a team including plastic surgery, transplant medicine and surgery, immunology, psychology, rehabilitation medicine, pharmacy and many other disciplines.
"The team was on standby from the end of November awaiting a suitable donor limb, and the call came just after Christmas.
Doctors say he is making good progress after an eight-hour operation at Leeds General Infirmary.
It is still very early to assess how much control of the hand will be gained - so far he can wiggle his fingers, but has no sense of touch.
Source: http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/health-20898940
http://news.sky.com/story/1033091/hand-transplant-completed-for-first-time-in-uk
'Diabetes care depressingly poor, say MPs', is the headline on the BBC News website. This is the damning verdict of a parliamentary report into standards of diabetes care in the NHS. The Public Accounts Committee reported that (in the words of the Daily Mail), "24,000 with diabetes 'are dying needlessly'".
The report was published by the Public Accounts Committee (PAC) – an influential group of MPs who have been given an oversight role to help ensure that taxpayers get value for money.
Based on official figures and spoken and written evidence from independent diabetes experts and officials, the PAC has set out recommendations for improved diabetes care in the NHS.
The report indicates that the NHS spent an estimated £3.9 billion on diabetes services in 2009/10. However, 80% of the costs are estimated to come from the management and treatment of avoidable diabetes-related complications, such as kidney disease and foot ulcers.
The report highlights that the number of people with diagnosed and undiagnosed diabetes is 3.1 million, set to rise to 3.8 million by 2020. This projected increase is likely to have a significant impact on NHS resources, the committee says.
The report accepts that there is consensus about what needs to be done for people with diabetes. However, progress in actually delivering the recommended standards and achieving treatment targets has been 'depressingly poor', it says.
The report, 'Department of Health: The management of adult diabetes services in the NHS' has been published by the PAC.
The PAC is made up of MPs appointed by the House of Commons, and is responsible for overseeing government expenditures to ensure transparency, value for money, and accountability in government financial operations.
The main findings of the report are:
The report states that the reasons these problems have arisen include:
The Department of Health has £5 million available to spend on new prosthetics centres for veterans in 2013. The money is part of a £22 million package to support veterans' physical and mental health from 2010 to 2015.
So far this year, 32 veterans applied to get high specification prosthetic equipment, such as computer controlled knee units and specialist feet. The Department of Health has committed to funding clinically appropriate prosthetics for any veteran in England who has lost a limb in the service of their country.
There are currently an estimated 1,335 veteran amputees in the United Kingdom with the majority living in England. The Government wants to raise awareness of this funding so that all veterans who have lost a limb in the service of their country can benefit from the extraordinary, life-changing work the NHS can do with prosthetics. Find out more