Showing posts with label orthopaedics. Show all posts
Showing posts with label orthopaedics. Show all posts

Friday, 16 December 2016

Things in the library 16 December...

Things closing for Christmas...
We will be closed for stocktaking all day on Thursday 22 December and then closed between Christmas & New Year re-opening on Tuesday 3rd January.
We wish you all a Merry Christmas & Happy New Year.

Things about journal club...
The next meeting of Journal Club will be on Thursday 22nd December 8:00 to 9:00 - Paper: Evaluation of a New Strategy for​ Clean-Catch Urine in Infants (Pediatrics Volume 1 38, number 3 , September 2016)​. If you then need to work off the homemade muffins you could come and join the library staff for a really exciting party game ...stocktaking!

Things on Evidence Based Medicine...
School of Health and Related Research are advertising this course at the moment booking Deadline: Wednesday, 4th January 2017: Real World Evaluation: Ten key principles for Evaluating Complex Health and Social Interventions (2 day course) Thursday, 2nd - Friday, 3rd March 2017

Things about fractures...
This week, as part of the Child Health Emergency Medicine Social Media Campaign, Cochrane Child Health are highlighting a 2014 Cochrane summary on interventions for treating femoral shaft fractures in children and adolescents. This review was selected for the TREKK Evidence Repository on fractures.

Things about decisions...
This week was the pre-launch of a joint campaign by Health Education England (HEE) and CILIP, the (Chartered Institute of Library and Information Professionals),  highlighting the multiple beneficial outcomes when health service providers work closely with their library and knowledge services. Every day across the healthcare sector in England more than a million decisions are made that have a profound and lasting impact on people’s lives and which influence the quality of healthcare and the cost of services.
HEE and CILIP are campaigning for decisions in the healthcare sector to be fully evidence-based, calling on government and health service providers to employ and make use of the skills of librarians and knowledge specialists in meeting their obligations under The Health and Social Care Act 2012.
Let us know if help we have given you has had an impact on your work.

Things about improvement...
An evidence-based national framework to guide action on improvement skill-building, leadership development and talent management for people in NHS-funded roles has been published. Developing People- Improving Care. The vision is for team leaders at every level of the NHS to develop improvement and leadership capabilities among their staff and themselves. This will help protect and improve services for patients in the short term and for the next 20 years.

Things children are eating...
Health Survey for England 2015  was published this week this report examines the prevalence of overweight and obesity among children in England in 2015. It describes differences between groups of children, by age, sex and income. Parents’ and children’s perceptions of their weight are
compared with objective measures of body mass. Trends in childhood obesity over time are also discussed. There is comment and further information from Children's Food Trust

Things about infections...
Surgical site infections (SSI) surveillance: NHS hospitals in England was published this week. This annual report covers surgical site infection (SSI) data collected by NHS hospitals and independent sector NHS treatment centres.

Things to curl up with...
What better than a good book....don't forget we have a selection of leisure reading that anyone may borrow. Don't take a chance on Father Christmas not bringing you something to read this year ! Come up to the library and browse before we close for Christmas.








Friday, 20 June 2014

Things in the library 20 June

Things published by NICE

New NICE guidance published this week on "The MAGEC system for spinal lengthening in children with scoliosis" it can be read here 

Also "Antibiotics for early-onset neonatal infection" an evidence update can be downloaded here 

Things to read
Trisha Greenhalgh has published an essay in the BMJ this week 'Evidence based medicine: a movement in crisis?" discussing distortion of evidence, too much evidence, marginal improvements and risk assessment, algorithmic rules and multimorbidity are some of the problems she identifies and she calls for a return to 'real evidence based medicine'. It can be read in full here






"Mental health and behaviour in schools" Department for Education advice for school staff published this week can be read here


Things we did

We had our annual library staff away day this week where we had an interesting discussion on our role within the trust as regards education and we set our objectives for future developments...we didn't go very far away but had a good view of the Henderson's factory!

Also this last week journal club was held - the next one is Tuesday 1st July 17:30-18:30...book the date now




Things to BBQ
With fine weather forecast - and the longest day of the year on Saturday it sounds like a good opportunity for a BBQ.  Mackerel with sizzled garlic, ginger & tomatoes is good for something different or perhaps Stuffed peppers and a great BBQ dessert favourite in my family is Pineapple in lime, vanilla and rum syrup