Full. So what needs to change . I i have been meeting doctors and nurses rethinking healthcare, picking problems up early. We have picking problems up early. Have essentially done 20 consultations in one here. The more peeple consultations in one here. The more people they consultations in one here. The more people they get a chance to come more people they get a chance to come here, the better. And usin to come here, the better. And using new to come here, the better. fific using new technology to come here, the better. fific using new technology to to come here, the better. Eic using new technology to take the hospital into the home. So can the nhs be fixed . Mat can the nhs be fixed . Not replacing can the nhs be fixed . Not replacing the can the nhs be fixed . Iirrt replacing the hospital, it isnt about the death of a hospital. Isnt about the death of a hospital isnt about the death of a hospital. Hello mrs east . 93yearold hospital. Hello mrs east . 93yearold elizabeth hospital.
So what needs to change . Ive been meeting doctors and nurses rethinking healthcare, picking problems up early. Weve essentially done 20 consultations in one here. The more people get a chance to come here, the better. And using new technology to take the hospital into the home. So, can the nhs be fixed . Were not replacing the hospital. This isnt about the death of a hospital, only about the rebirth of the hospital. Hello, mrs east . 93 year old Elizabeth East is being assessed at Thejohn Radcliffe in oxford. How are you doing . Like many hospitals across the country, it has been pushed to its limit. Good morning. Hello. How are you feeling today . Elizabeth fell at her care home and has a broken arm. Shes already spent nearly five hours in the Emergency Department. Now, she is being assessed on a Special Unit Run by drjordan bowen. Youve had a long night. You must be very sleepy. When admitted to a hospital ward, frail, older patients stay for an average of ten days. How about are yo
full. so what needs to change? i i have been meeting doctors and nurses rethinking healthcare, picking problems up early. we have picking problems up early. - have essentially done 20 consultations in one here. the more peeple consultations in one here. the more people they consultations in one here. the more people they get a chance to come more people they get a chance to come here, the better. and usin: to come here, the better. and using new to come here, the better. fific using new technology to come here, the better. fific using new technology to to come here, the better. e ic using new technology to take the hospital into the home. so can the nhs be fixed? mat can the nhs be fixed? not replacing can the nhs be fixed? not replacing the can the nhs be fixed? iirrt replacing the hospital, it isn t about the death of a hospital. isn t about the death of a hospital- isn t about the death of a hospital. hello mrs east? 93-year-old hospital. hello mrs east? 9
The media, that is what drove me to it. And it claims lives. This 20 year old died after battling Eating Disorders for most of his teenage years. I think, with adequate care, steven would be alive today, and i think he would have been living quite a healthy life. It is time to break the silence on a growing problem for british men. I struggled with an Eating Disorder for over half my life. It is a very secretive illness. Men, in particular, find it very difficult to talk about. But thankfully, more and more are coming forward. I have never really understood why this illness has blighted my life and the lives of so many others. It can hit at any time, and it doesnt discriminate. James is 25. He has anorexia nervosa, a serious Mental Illness where someone tries to keep their weight as low as possible by restricting the amount of food they eat. How is it going . Are you all right . Not bad, thanks. Tommy, what is your anorexia like now . Even my body is saying no, stop, my head is saying,
The American Association of Kidney Patients (AAKP), the oldest and largest independent kidney patient consumer organization in the U.S., is raising public awareness on May 1, National High Potassium Awareness Day, about the devastating impacts of unmanaged potassium levels in individuals with chronic kidney disease (CKD). Nearly three million Americans with CKD and/or heart failure live with high potassium levels.