Showing posts with label raise. Show all posts
Showing posts with label raise. Show all posts

Thursday, 29 August 2013

Hospital charities fight to raise funds as giving slows in austerity Britain

Children taking part in London 2012 Olympic Games opening ceremony Great Ormond Street Hospital, represented by child performers in the London 2012 Olympic Games opening ceremony, raises additional income through its charitable arm. Photograph: Bloomberg/Bloomberg via Getty Images

The Olympics Movement bans corporate logos from official venues, but last year the brand of probably the most successful organisation in its sector found its way into the London 2012 Olympics official opening ceremony. Great Ormond Street Hospital Charity, whose baby and teardrop logo appeared in a tribute to the NHS, raised £66.3m in 2011-12 – around a fifth of the operating income of the health service trust it supports.

Great Ormond Street benefits from a perpetual right to royalties from JM Barrie's play Peter Pan, but has recently raised millions from selling naming rights to new buildings.

In June, Whitbread pledged £7.5m for the Premier Inn Clinical Building, named after the company's hotel chain. This will join the Morgan Stanley Clinical Building (the bank and its staff donated £11m in 2010) and the Mittal Children's Medical Centre, named after Aditya Mittal (heir of billionaire industrialist Lakshmi Mittal) who donated £15m to the hospital in 2008.

Other NHS children's hospital charities tend to be far smaller, earning between £1m and £2m annually to fund specialist equipment, play areas, art therapy and the like. But with state funding effectively frozen in real terms and a string of new hospital buildings opening over the next few years, hospital charities are fighting to raise their profile and their income.

It can be an uphill struggle. "Sometimes you will go to a potential funder and the opening gambit is, why should I give you any money, I pay my taxes," says David Vernon-Edwards, director of the Children's Hospital Charity. "We emphasise that our money only goes on enhancing the NHS service, not subsidising it – and spurring the NHS trust to greater things. We're not a slush fund," he stresses.

The charity aims to raise £20m by September 2016 to support the transformation of Sheffield Children's hospital. To meet its target in tough times the charity has changed its focus, dropping the word 'city' from its name. "It stopped people from giving money to it, as they thought it was just for children from Sheffield," explains Vernon-Edwards. "We have to go out to national sources, to high net-worth individuals." The charity is now asking for larger amounts from existing donors and organising "high end" events.

Liverpool's Alder Hey Children's Charity is working with local businesses. Liverpool retailer Shop Direct donates sample clothes for resale and has helped the charity produce an app. Aintree racecourse help the charity to organise fundraising events around the Grand National, including the sale of jockeys' colours and sponsorship of a race.

In September, the charity will launch a campaign to help equip the new Alder Hey in the Park hospital, which opens in autumn 2015. Director of charities Clare White says this provides an opportunity to install extra equipment, technology and play facilities. An undisclosed national retailer has agreed to provide the charity with access to its customers through direct mail and online via its website, and will sell a product with profits going to the appeal. "The most important thing with companies is that there is mutual benefit in the partnership," says White. "Fundraising is a profession, and you have to work on a professional basis."

Maureen Harrison, chief executive of Edinburgh's Sick Kids Friends Foundation, has worked for the charity for 17 years. She says that corporate fundraising has grown considerably over the years, but has changed as a result of the financial crisis which hit Edinburgh hard. "We no longer have events at which corporates provide sponsorship and take tables in the way they used to," she explains.

Such largesse is now out of place in an age of austerity and redundancy. Instead, employee fundraising has become more important to the charity. Staff may vote for an employer's dedicate charity, and companies allow staff to take volunteer days (for professional as well as altruistic reasons) and match personal donations. "It starts with the grateful parents, the friends of grateful parents and the former patients," says Harrison.

All three charities run shops within their hospitals, and through these are not big money spinners they contribute in other ways. White describes Alder Hey's charity shop as "a great awareness raiser" and will be situated in the main atrium of the new re-developed hospital.

The Sick Kids charity shop sells basic toiletries as well as fundraising items. In emergencies, parents often follow their children to the hospital from remote parts of Scotland without packing essentials, and when they get to the hospital they don't want to leave the building, so the shop provides an important service.

What about the naming rights which have raised tens of millions for Great Ormond Street? Harrison says it is very important to have a clear policy on this avenue agreed in advance: "It's an area that could easily be got wrong." The Children's Hospital Charity has agreed a price list for various patient rooms and facilities, Vernon-Edwards says, and already has commitments for up to £25,000.

For those who want to remain anonymous there are other ways to recognise large gifts, such as installing a picture of a landscape a donor knows well in the hospital. But as Alder Hey's prepares to open its new research and education centre, White adds: "If someone wants to put in £7m, they can put their name on it."

This article is published by Guardian Professional. Join the Healthcare Professionals Network to receive regular emails and exclusive offers.


View the original article here

Tuesday, 27 August 2013

Hospital charities fight to raise funds as giving slows in austerity Britain

Children taking part in London 2012 Olympic Games opening ceremony Great Ormond Street Hospital, represented by child performers in the London 2012 Olympic Games opening ceremony, raises additional income through its charitable arm. Photograph: Bloomberg/Bloomberg via Getty Images

The Olympics Movement bans corporate logos from official venues, but last year the brand of probably the most successful organisation in its sector found its way into the London 2012 Olympics official opening ceremony. Great Ormond Street Hospital Charity, whose baby and teardrop logo appeared in a tribute to the NHS, raised £66.3m in 2011-12 – around a fifth of the operating income of the health service trust it supports.

Great Ormond Street benefits from a perpetual right to royalties from JM Barrie's play Peter Pan, but has recently raised millions from selling naming rights to new buildings.

In June, Whitbread pledged £7.5m for the Premier Inn Clinical Building, named after the company's hotel chain. This will join the Morgan Stanley Clinical Building (the bank and its staff donated £11m in 2010) and the Mittal Children's Medical Centre, named after Aditya Mittal (heir of billionaire industrialist Lakshmi Mittal) who donated £15m to the hospital in 2008.

Other NHS children's hospital charities tend to be far smaller, earning between £1m and £2m annually to fund specialist equipment, play areas, art therapy and the like. But with state funding effectively frozen in real terms and a string of new hospital buildings opening over the next few years, hospital charities are fighting to raise their profile and their income.

It can be an uphill struggle. "Sometimes you will go to a potential funder and the opening gambit is, why should I give you any money, I pay my taxes," says David Vernon-Edwards, director of the Children's Hospital Charity. "We emphasise that our money only goes on enhancing the NHS service, not subsidising it – and spurring the NHS trust to greater things. We're not a slush fund," he stresses.

The charity aims to raise £20m by September 2016 to support the transformation of Sheffield Children's hospital. To meet its target in tough times the charity has changed its focus, dropping the word 'city' from its name. "It stopped people from giving money to it, as they thought it was just for children from Sheffield," explains Vernon-Edwards. "We have to go out to national sources, to high net-worth individuals." The charity is now asking for larger amounts from existing donors and organising "high end" events.

Liverpool's Alder Hey Children's Charity is working with local businesses. Liverpool retailer Shop Direct donates sample clothes for resale and has helped the charity produce an app. Aintree racecourse help the charity to organise fundraising events around the Grand National, including the sale of jockeys' colours and sponsorship of a race.

In September, the charity will launch a campaign to help equip the new Alder Hey in the Park hospital, which opens in autumn 2015. Director of charities Clare White says this provides an opportunity to install extra equipment, technology and play facilities. An undisclosed national retailer has agreed to provide the charity with access to its customers through direct mail and online via its website, and will sell a product with profits going to the appeal. "The most important thing with companies is that there is mutual benefit in the partnership," says White. "Fundraising is a profession, and you have to work on a professional basis."

Maureen Harrison, chief executive of Edinburgh's Sick Kids Friends Foundation, has worked for the charity for 17 years. She says that corporate fundraising has grown considerably over the years, but has changed as a result of the financial crisis which hit Edinburgh hard. "We no longer have events at which corporates provide sponsorship and take tables in the way they used to," she explains.

Such largesse is now out of place in an age of austerity and redundancy. Instead, employee fundraising has become more important to the charity. Staff may vote for an employer's dedicate charity, and companies allow staff to take volunteer days (for professional as well as altruistic reasons) and match personal donations. "It starts with the grateful parents, the friends of grateful parents and the former patients," says Harrison.

All three charities run shops within their hospitals, and through these are not big money spinners they contribute in other ways. White describes Alder Hey's charity shop as "a great awareness raiser" and will be situated in the main atrium of the new re-developed hospital.

The Sick Kids charity shop sells basic toiletries as well as fundraising items. In emergencies, parents often follow their children to the hospital from remote parts of Scotland without packing essentials, and when they get to the hospital they don't want to leave the building, so the shop provides an important service.

What about the naming rights which have raised tens of millions for Great Ormond Street? Harrison says it is very important to have a clear policy on this avenue agreed in advance: "It's an area that could easily be got wrong." The Children's Hospital Charity has agreed a price list for various patient rooms and facilities, Vernon-Edwards says, and already has commitments for up to £25,000.

For those who want to remain anonymous there are other ways to recognise large gifts, such as installing a picture of a landscape a donor knows well in the hospital. But as Alder Hey's prepares to open its new research and education centre, White adds: "If someone wants to put in £7m, they can put their name on it."

This article is published by Guardian Professional. Join the Healthcare Professionals Network to receive regular emails and exclusive offers.


View the original article here

Tuesday, 20 August 2013

Longer waiting times for GP appointments predicted as concerned GPs raise fears about the impact of cuts for patient care, UK

Main Category: Primary Care / General Practice
Also Included In: Public Health
Article Date: 20 Aug 2013 - 1:00 PDT Current ratings for:
Longer waiting times for GP appointments predicted as concerned GPs raise fears about the impact of cuts for patient care, UK
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Over 70% of GPs are forecasting longer waiting times for GP appointments within the next two years - as nearly half (47%) reveal that they have cut back on the range of services they provide for their patients.

In the latest survey by the Royal College of General Practitioners (RCGP) highlighting the growing crisis in general practice, more than 80% of respondents said that they now have insufficient resources to provide high quality patient care.

As well as the reduction in patient services, 39% of respondents to the ComRes poll also said they had cut practice staff and over half had experienced difficulty recruiting and retaining GPs.

Worryingly, four in five GPs were concerned that it will become increasingly difficult to deliver continuity of care to vulnerable elderly people - which has been highlighted as a priority by the English Health Secretary Jeremy Hunt. And 72% of GPs in England said that the amount of time they are able to spend on frontline patient care has been reduced as a result of the new clinical commissioning responsibilities they have been given.

The RCGP is now calling on all four Governments across the UK for an emergency package of additional investment for general practice - before there are disastrous consequences for patients.

Dr Clare Gerada, Chair of the RCGP, said: "The results of our survey paint a bleak picture for patients, the profession and the future of general practice. GPs are grappling with a 'double whammy' of spiralling workloads and dwindling resources, and big cracks are now starting to appear in the care and services that we can deliver for our patients.

"We are particularly concerned about the effect this is having, and will continue to have, on waiting times for GP appointments. We fully understand that patients are already frustrated - and GPs are doing their best to improve access to appointments - but the profession is now at breaking point and we do not have the capacity to take on any more work, without the extra funding and resources to back it up.

"GPs currently make 90% of patient contacts for only 9% of the NHS budget in England. Some GPs are making up to 60 patient contacts in a single day, which is not safe, for patients or GPs.

"We are working our hardest to make sure that patients are not affected but the status quo is no longer an option. We must have an emergency package of additional investment for general practice to protect GP services and protect our patients from even deeper cuts to their care and longer waiting times."

The RCGP survey is the latest in a series highlighting the growing crisis in general practice. The College is concerned that the current situation in A&E departments is overshadowing the very serious problems in general practice. A previous College poll by Research Now revealed that 85% of GPs now consider the profession to be 'in crisis' and half of GPs are no longer able to guarantee safe patient care.

Dr Gerada added: "General practice is the most cost-effective and efficient arm of the health service - GPs keep the rest of the NHS stable and secure. Once general practice starts to crumble, the entire NHS will follow with disastrous consequences for our patients.

"Last week the English Government announced an additional £500 million for A&E departments. What we need is our fair share of funding so that GPs can do more for our patients in their communities."

ComRes interviewed 206 General Practitioners online - 170 from England; 21 from Scotland; nine from Wales; and six from Northern Ireland - between the 7th August and 9th August 2013. Data are regionally representative by NHS Strategic Health Authority (SHA). ComRes is a member of the British Polling Council and abides by its rules. Full data tables are available on the ComRes website, www.comres.co.uk

Article adapted by Medical News Today from original press release. Click 'references' tab above for source.
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'Longer waiting times for GP appointments predicted as concerned GPs raise fears about the impact of cuts for patient care, UK'

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Friday, 16 August 2013

Diabetes hospitalization: some antibiotics 'raise risk'

Featured Article
Academic Journal
Main Category: Diabetes
Also Included In: Infectious Diseases / Bacteria / Viruses
Article Date: 15 Aug 2013 - 0:00 PDT Current ratings for:
Diabetes hospitalization: some antibiotics 'raise risk'
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Researchers have found that, compared with other antibiotics, people with diabetes taking a class known as fluoroquinolones may be at higher risk of blood sugar-related complications.

Researchers from National Taiwan University in Taipei, carried out a population-based cohort study of around 78,000 people with diabetes.

The researchers analyzed data from the claims database for Taiwan's national insurance program, and looked at patients who had received an oral prescription of one of these three different classes of antibiotics: fluoroquinolones (levofloxacin, ciprofloxacin or moxifloxacin), second-generation cephalosporins (cefuroxime, cefaclor or cefprozil), acrolides (clarithromycin or azithromycin).

The scientists analyzed the number of emergency visits and hospitalizations related to diabetes within 30 days of the patients using the antibiotics. The visits were for dysglycemia, with blood sugars either too high (hyperglycemia) or too low (hypoglycemia).

The study, published in the journal Clinical Infectious Diseases, revealed that the patients with diabetes using fluoroquinolones had a higher risk of dysglycemia than the diabetics using other antibiotics.

The research showed that the risk was dependent on the type of antibiotic the patient was using within the class of fluoroquinolones.

The incidence, or absolute risk, of hyperglycemia cases for every 1,000 people was:

Moxifloxacin - 6.9Ciprofloxacin - 4.0Levofloxacin - 3.9.

The absolute risk of hypoglycemia cases per every 1,000 people was:

Moxifloxacin - 10.0Levofloxacin - 9.3Ciprofloxacin - 7.9.

Fluoroquinolones are a class of antibiotics with a wide number of uses against bacterial infection.

By comparison, the researchers found the absolute risks were lower among diabetes patients taking other antibiotics that can be used. The numbers were: In the macrolides class: 1.6 per 1,000 (hyperglycemia), 3.7 (hypo)For cephalosporin antibiotics: 2.1 per 1,000 (hyperglycemia), 3.2 (hypo).

The researchers say that previous research has linked fluoroquinolones to dysglycemia. They note that one of the fluoroquinolone antibiotics, gatifloxacin, was withdrawn from the US market in 2006 due, the researchers say, "to the risk of blood sugar abnormalities."

The study authors conclude that this research should prompt clinicians to consider the risks when prescribing fluoroquinolones for diabetes patients. They authors say:

"Our results showed a class effect regarding increased risk of severe dysglycemia among diabetic patients administered ?uoroquinolones in Taiwan."

"Clinicians should consider these risks when treating patients with diabetes and prescribe ?uoroquinolones cautiously."

People with diabetes can spot hypoglycemia early. Low blood sugar can, however, become serious, as listed by the Mayo Clinic: clumsiness or jerky movements, muscle weakness, difficulty speaking or slurred speech, blurry or double vision, drowsiness, confusion, convulsions or seizures, and unconsciousness.

High blood sugars, hyperglycemia, can "become severe and lead to serious complications requiring emergency care, such as diabetic coma."

Written by Honor Whiteman


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View the original article here