The Cowal Hospice has been closed during NHS Highland’s Continue reading
Tag Archives: NHS Highland
Budget increase for NHS Highland
Scotland’s NHS revenue funding allocations, just announced Continue reading
Glencoe joins Argyll community buyout march with ‘Yes’ vote for hospital
Glencoe Hospital, the former geriatric facility, was closed Continue reading
SPEAKEASY: Argyll’s gay, lesbian and transgender community
SPEAKEASY want to hear the views Continue reading
Council grants over £1.2 million to Mull & Iona Progressive Care Centre
Funding for a new and state-of-the-art progressive care centre Continue reading
Best possible outcome for Colonsay’s GP post

No one could have designed a better solution to the job vacancy for a GP Continue reading
This week’s papers: Oban Times article puts Camelot in Argyll
Argyll is well served by its local newspapers. The prize in a sample of this week’s Continue reading
Mid Argyll Swimming Pool – a vital community facility that needs community commitment now
Mid Argyll Swimming Pool is still operating – so keep using it. The Board met last night (26th February) in emergency session to discuss its current financial crisis. There were seventeen people present. Fifteen were supporters representing a range of supportive community groups and organisations. The others were the only two remaining members of the Board: Chair Colin McLean and Denise McDiarmid, each of whom has a strong background in finance..
Even this fact makes several important things clear. There is strong and widespread community support for the facility. The remaining members of the Board are key placements with very necessary skill sets. The Board now needs new members. Start thinking about this and we’ll return to it shortly.
Since our last report, as well as last night’s meeting the following developments have taken place:
- The bank extended its overdraft to enable staff wages for February to be met.
- The Pool has had a good earning week with a new series of swimming lessons just started
- Management accounts and a crisis-response business plan are already in preparation
- The Chair of the Board met with senior Council officials this afternoon (27th February) to discuss what they would want to see in place to enable them to consider emergency assistance
After this whirlwind series of events and admitting to not having slept for ten days, Colin McLean says cautiously that:’The position is still fragile but there is reason to be hopeful that a solution can be found’. It should be noted that Mr McLean considered the word ‘optimistic’ here and rejected it in favour of ‘hopeful’ – a more sober assessment of the realities.
If short term assistance can be provided by the council, it is clear that additional sources of funding for the future will need to be found from other sources.
The situation is recoverable if the will can be summoned communally to make it happen. The Board needs £10,000 for the Pool’s immediate stability. While this is not an insignificant amount of money, it is not impossibly daunting.
This is an important community resource. Children learn to swim in it. People of all ages use it to exercise, socialise and stay healthy. To stay open, the Pool now urgently needs resources from the community it serves:
- new members of the board – and people with a business or management background would obviously be hugely valuable. This might come from recently retired business people willing to step in and bring thier expertise to bear for the good of the wider community. It migh come from working business people who are good time managers and are prepared to bring their skills to bear on the situation. If you could help with this, please ring 01546 606676
- donations and sponsorships – from individuals and businesses. These will not only help at a very practical level. They will demonstrate to potential funders that the Pool is regarded by its community as a genuinely valuable service. However small or large such donations may be, they will be warmly welcomed. If you could help with this, please ring 01546 606676
NHS Highland introduce ‘surgical pause’ so that if you’re in theatre for a tonsilectomy they won’t take your leg off
Those undergoing surgery under the auspices of HNS Highland should be able to let some of the nightmares recede a little now. The health authority has introduced the ‘surgical pause’ – a practical and basic check list to be gone through by theatre staff before the Surgeon holds out his hand and says: ‘Scalpel’.
It’s a ‘doors to manual’ approach – ‘I say it, you do it/check it’ routine:
- Who is this patient?
- Is this the patient we’re expecting?
- What is the operation scheduled for this patient?
- Are there any medical issues or allergies we need to be aware of?
- Are we going to need blood and have we got enough of it?
This will come as a relief to some said to have secreted on their person a little card with their name and operation on it to hand to theatre staff before they got the needle.
The ‘surgical pause’ pre-operative routine is now in use at Oban’s Lorn and the Isles Hospital, Fort William’s Belford Hospital, Wick’s Caithness General Hospital and Raigmore Hospital in Inverness.
Raigmore Hospital’s theatre manager, Gavin Hookway (do they hire them for their names?), has said that he has been impressed by how the staff had taken up ‘the challenge’ of introducing the system.
All we can say is that if theatre staff regard doing this sort of basic check as ‘a challenge’, it’s no wonder the NHS has some unfortunate case histories where ingrown toenails resulted in post-operative amputees.
15 chronically ill patients on Bute to have self-monitoring health units at home
NHS Highland and Argyll and Bute Council have together provided significant funding for a pioneering advance in healthcare for the area. They have bought units from Telehealth Solutions which allow people to monitor their own basic health at home, checking their own heart rate, weight, blood pressure and blood oxygen levels.
The Telehealth home health monitoring units – HomePods – will next week (starting 9th January) be installed in the homes of 15 patients in Bute suffering from Chronic Obstructive Pulmonary Disease (COPD). This condition, according to the British Lung Foundation, kills more than 4000 Scots every year.
The units are also two-way communications systems. Clinicians can review the patients’ health data remotely and decide whether a face-to-face consultation is necessary. In remote areas, like most of Argyll and the islands, this will save patients unnecessary travel.
As well as this, medical staff and services can send up-to-date and relevant healthcare information direct to the patient monitoring their own health on this unit – or to those who care for them at home.
The device is also expected to decrese hspital admissions to a degree. The early identification of changes to the vital signs concerned will, in some cases, enable non-hospitalised treatment in good time.
The installations in Bute will be followed by further installations in Oban and on Luing. These wil be different units. They will be Multi-User Pods installed in GP’s surgeries, care homes and pharmacies. More than one person at a time will be able to use them to monitor their health independently and report any changes to their GP for attention.
NHS Highland’s Project Managert, Lynn Garrett, says: ‘… in rural areas this could contribute to the reduction in unnecessary patient travel, as this information can be viewed by clinicians remote from the patient. There are also vast potential benefits to clinicians and healthcare workers, including a possible reduction in admissions to hospital and a higher level of available patient information. The introduction of this technology will improve the lives of our patients, complement the expertise of our staff and put Argyll and Bute at the forefront of the use of telehealth’.
Related articles by Zemanta
- Caffeine And Blood Pressure (aheartylife.com)










![Reblog this post [with Zemanta]](http://img.zemanta.com/reblog_e.png?x-id=da4a51dd-bbe8-48bf-82d1-cdce4fa0c80e)