Posts Tagged ‘politics’

Labour leader in bid to save Lothians MS respite centre

Sunday, June 20th, 2010 | Tags: , , , , , , ,
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SCOTTISH Labour leader Iain Gray is seeking an urgent meeting with health secretary Nicola Sturgeon in a bid to save Scotland’s only respite home for people with multiple sclerosis.

Leuchie House, on the outskirts of North Berwick, is run by the Multiple Sclerosis Society which has decided that it will no longer directly provide residential respite care services.

And the home will close later this year unless a new provider is found to take it over.

Mr Gray, MSP for East Lothian, visited the home along with the area’s MP Fiona O’Donnell.

He said: “When we spoke to the guests they were very clear that this was the best holiday option for them and they didn’t know what they would do without Leuchie House.

“The decision by the MS Society to stop providing residential respite care is completely at odds with the wishes of users.

“The society’s own consultation process shows that 94 per cent of people with MS rate breaks in the society’s centres – including Leuchie House – as either very good or good.

“The MS Society argues that these changes are led by the service users, but the outcome of their own consultation would appear to suggest that moves to close down their residential centres are more about cutting costs.”

He said inspections by the Care Commission confirmed that people with MS received first-class care at Leuchie House. “It would be terrible if such a tremendous facility was lost, not just for East Lothian but well beyond.”

Call to invest in specialist nurses

Friday, February 26th, 2010 | Tags: , , , , , , , ,
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The NHS could save millions of pounds by investing in nurses to support people with conditions like Parkinson’s and multiple sclerosis, a union said.

Specialist nurses help keep people out of hospital by offering advice on medication and day-to-day living with an illness, the Royal College of Nursing (RCN) said.

It estimates £56 million a year could be saved on care for people with Parkinson’s through greater use of specialist nurses. Meanwhile, £180 million could be saved by treating multiple sclerosis flare-ups at home rather than in hospital.

Another £84 million could be saved if specialist nurses supported people with epilepsy rather than relying on GPs.

The RCN surveyed almost 300 specialist nurses working in 60 NHS organisations and charities and found only 36% believed all those patients who needed specialist nursing currently received it.

Of the 49% who identified problems accessing specialist care, 69% said specialist nurse services are overloaded and cannot take on new patients. More than a third said they had seen cuts in services over the last 12 months while 57% are concerned jobs will be threatened in the near future. Most (95%) of those seeing cuts said they were within the NHS.

Specialist nurses work in a range of areas, including cancer, diabetes and asthma.

Dr Peter Carter, general secretary of the RCN, said: “Nurses realise that whoever wins the next election will be looking to make savings and to deliver more for less.

“While the temptation may be to cut or downgrade specialist nursing roles, this would be a false economy which would only add to the growing cost of treating long-term conditions. In fact, specialist nurses save money through the better management of conditions, keeping patients out of hospital, and advising on the best drug and other treatments.”

The RCN said the NHS was in such debt in 2006 that many specialist roles were lost, frozen or downgraded.