Background: The key to the digital leveling-up strategy of the National Health Service is the development of a digitally proficient leadership. The National Health Service Digital Academy (NHSDA) Digital Health Leadership program was designed to support emerging digital leaders to acquire the necessary skills to facilitate transformation. This study examined the influence of the program on professional identity formation as a means of creating a more proficient digital health leadership.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe Digital Health Leadership Programme is commissioned by Health Education England and part of the wider NHS Digital Academy. The Programme is a consortium of Imperial College London's Institute of Global Health Innovation, The University of Edinburgh's Usher Institute and Harvard Medical School. In 2021, Health Data Research UK joined Imperial and Edinburgh to deliver phase 2.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFObjectives: This study aimed to determine the impact of the United Kingdom's National Health Service Digital Academy (NHSDA) Digital Health Leadership course on high-level recommendations in digital preparedness and the development of a proficient leadership to oversee digital transformation, which has been a longstanding priority within the NHS.
Design: A mixed methods study incorporating an online questionnaire, in-depth interviews and focus groups that were then analysed through a thematic analysis, underpinned by a constructivist approach.
Settings: An online mixed methods study of a defined cohort of participants who had completed the NHSDA course.
Design thinking provides a creative and innovate approach to solve a complex problem. The discover, define, develop and delivery phases of design thinking lead to the most effective solution and this approach can be widely applied in medical education, from technology intervention projects to curriculum development. Participants in design thinking acquire essential transferable life-long learning skills in dealing with uncertainty and collaborative team working.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFIntraductal papillary mucinous neoplasm (IPMN) is a distinct group of benign pancreatic neoplasms often discovered incidentally on imaging. Apart from their malignant potential, little is known about their natural history as most are surgically resected. We report an unusual presentation and possible natural history of IPMN in a patient who refused surgery and hence was on regular follow up.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe interleukin 1 (IL-1) gene cluster has been implicated in acute pancreatitis. Penta-allelic and bi-allelic polymorphisms exist in the IL-1RN and IL-1B genes, respectively. The aim of the study was to investigate these polymorphisms in acute pancreatitis.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFObjective: To compare the level of provision of carotid endarterectomy (an intervention of proved efficacy for prevention of stroke in patients with symptomatic high grade carotid artery stenosis) with estimates of need.
Design: Comparison of regional, district, and age-sex specific operation rates derived from hospital episode statistics with estimates of need based on demographic and epidemiological data; interviews with regional vascular surgeons and a joint provider-purchaser workshop to discuss implications.
Setting: Former Wessex Regional Health Authority, 1991-2 to 1995-6.
The clinical value of the Lundh test in the diagnosis of pancreatic disorders was reviewed retrospectively for 139 patients with proven pancreatic disease (15 acute and 72 chronic pancreatitis, 51 carcinoma of the pancreas and one partial pancreatectomy). There was a good separation between patients with pancreatic disease and those with other gastrointestinal disorders who presented with similar symptoms. The test was most helpful in patients with chronic pancreatitis (diagnostic rate 89%, mean tryptic activity (MTA) less than 7 U), more particularly in those presenting with jaundice or steatorrhoea (100%) than pain (86%), but less successful (diagnostic rate 68%) in carcinoma of the pancreas (steatorrhoea 100%; jaundice 64%; pain 55%).
View Article and Find Full Text PDFA case, diagnosed clinically as the Prader-Willi syndrome, was shown by Giemsa banding, to have a 15/15 chromosome translocation. A review of the literature indicates that such a translocation has only been described once before, in a normal woman, but that chromosme abnormalities in the Prader-Willi syndrome most commonly involve the D group. The significance of this would be clarified by specific chromosome identification in these patients.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFTwo cases of tuberculous cervicitis are presented. The presence in cervical smears of both epithelioid and Langhans' giant cells, which are described, should raise a strong suspicion of tuberculosis.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe value of brush cytology under direct vision in the diagnosis of oesophageal cancer was evaluated and compared with other diagnostic procedures in a prospective study of 33 patients suspected of having an oesophageal lesion. Barium swallow correctly diagnosed cancer in 19 out of 20 patients, the remaining patient was diagnosed by both histology and cytology. In all, cytology was correct in 18 cases (90%), whereas histology confirmed the diagnosis in 10 (50%).
View Article and Find Full Text PDFPure pancreatic juice has been collected from 61 patients at the time of endoscopic retrograde cholangio-pancreatography (ERCP) for the purpose of cytodiagnosis. The ERCP and cytological findings are discussed. Pure pancreatic juice cytology may help in the interpretation of the pancreatogram in both pancreatitis and pancreatic carcinoma.
View Article and Find Full Text PDF