‘Action Needed’ To Protect Nurses
Scotland’s nurses need better protection from violence and aggression, it has been warned. The Royal College of Nursing Scotland has launched a campaign to get MSPs and employers to tackle the problem.
Read MoreScotland’s nurses need better protection from violence and aggression, it has been warned. The Royal College of Nursing Scotland has launched a campaign to get MSPs and employers to tackle the problem.
Read MoreScottish ministers have confirmed they aim to raise the legal age for buying cigarettes north of the border to 18. Smoking in enclosed public spaces has been banned in Scotland since March, in a move widely praised by health campaigners.
Read MoreThe maximum fees that the Care Commission can charge for regulating care services are to be frozen for the second year running. This means that the maximum fee levels set by Ministers in 2005 will continue to apply for 2007-08. Any shortfall in the Care Commission’s costs as a result of this decision will be met by the Executive.
Read MoreA schoolgirl with a rare degenerative disease whose parents are battling for the right for her to be given an expensive drug therapy is the only eligible child in the UK being denied the treatment, it was claimed yesterday.
Read MoreThe Smoking Prevention Working Group’s report – Towards a Future without Tobacco – has now been published. Written by Dr Laurence Gruer, Director of Public Health Science at NHS Health Scotland, the report sets out 31 recommendations, mainly aimed at preventing children and young people from starting to smoke and becoming regular smokers.
Read MoreThe Scottish Executive have confirmed that more than £33 million had been allocated to tackle antisocial behaviour next year. Justice Minister Cathy Jamieson told the Community Wardens Conference in Dunblane that the country’s 550 wardens were contributing to a safer, stronger Scotland by ‘reclaiming the streets’. The money (£33.16 million) will go to community planning partnerships in each of Scotland 32 local authority areas for the financial year 2007-08.
Read MoreScotland’s doctors have welcomed the publication of a report that includes recommendations to increase the age for purchase of cigarettes from 16 to 18 and the creation of a licensing scheme for shop keepers who sell tobacco. The report, Towards a future without tobacco, has been published by an expert working group and makes recommendations to the Scottish Executive on measures that should be introduced to tackle the number of young people smoking in Scotland.
Read MoreThe registration of social care workers will bring a new professionalism to the sector. That’s the view of David Baird, the current President of the Social Care Association. David was speaking at a lunch hosted by Kibble Education and Care Centre, in Paisley – where David is Head of Community Services – to acknowledge his year as President of the SCA.
Read MoreHealth board officials have begun a review to decide whether to fund treatment for an eight-year-old girl with a rare degenerative condition. The parents of Hayleigh Reynolds had been told NHS Greater Glasgow and Clyde would not pay for enzyme replacement therapy at a cost of £100,000 a year. Health officials said they sympathised, but the treatment had not been approved for use by the NHS in Scotland. They are reviewing the situation, with a final decision expected in December.
Read MoreThe NHS should provide “noisy rooms” and “chill-out zones” in hospitals or other locations where young people are being treated, according to a survey by one of Scotland’s biggest health boards. A common complaint in submissions to a consultation on children and young people’s health services run by NHS Lothian was a lack of “age-appropriate” facilities in both GP surgeries and hospital settings.
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