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News Report Page 13 of 14
Publication Date:-
2021-05-16
 
News reports located on this page = 3.

Southport MP Welcomes Local Pharmacies Now Stocking Coronavirus Tests

IN Sefton, Community Pharmacy Teams are this month starting to offer free Coronavirus (Covid19) test kits as they help to support the lifting of national restrictions and the Pandemic recovery.

The new 'Pharmacy Collect' service will make Coronavirus test kits known as lateral flow devices; readily available to people without symptoms free of charge from local NHS Pharmacies.

Pharmacy Collect offers a convenient location to collect these test kits from. NHS Test and Trace research found that people prefer to access testing close to home, with Pharmacists trusted by their local communities.

The consumer healthcare association, Proprietary Association of Great Britain (PAGB), also found that since the start of the Pandemic, almost one in three people are now more likely to visit a Pharmacy for advice before seeking help elsewhere.

Anyone can request a box of test kits from the Pharmacy Counter for regular testing, at home or elsewhere.

The test distribution service from Pharmacies, along with other locations, sits under NHS Test and Trace and forms part of the Government's website Covid19 roadmap plan.

Prime Minister Boris Johnson announced on Easter Monday that everyone in England would be given access to two free Coronavirus tests a week. It is hoped that widening the offer of tests will help to identify Covid-positive cases in the community and break the chain of transmission, avoiding the need for further lockdowns.

You can use the NHS Test and Trace Site Finder map to locate participating Pharmacies in your area:- Test-And-Trace.NHS.UK

James Moir community Pharmacist said:- "As a Community Pharmacist, I am really excited about starting the Pharmacy Collect service. Our Pharmacy has been offering public health services for several years and my patients have been extremely positive about these. There is so much that Pharmacists and their teams can do to help our communities as the Covid restrictions are eased. Community Pharmacies are the most accessible healthcare locations; we offer convenient access to medicines and a range of health services without the need for an appointment. This will be of particular value in this service, where we can really help those who may not be able to travel far to access these tests. Pharmacy hasn't stopped during the Pandemic: community Pharmacies in England continue to have 600,000 informal healthcare consultations a week. This shows that patients value the convenience of being able to choose to get health services from their local Pharmacy."

Community Pharmacy Sefton said:- "Community Pharmacy provision of Covid testing means that people in Sefton will have greater access to this service. Many people may choose Pharmacy for health services because they can visit Pharmacies in a variety of locations and at a time that suits them. Community Pharmacists are looking forward to doing their bit as people return to work and education. This is just 1 of many examples of how Pharmacy teams have helped support patients, the public and the nation during the Pandemic."

Alastair Buxton, PSNC Director of NHS Services, said:- "It's fantastic that people without symptoms are able to walk into local community Pharmacies to access free lateral flow tests to use at home. Pharmacies are at the heart of local communities: they have offered face-to-face healthcare advice throughout the Covid19 Pandemic and they are pleased to support the national testing programme. Many Pharmacies have already begun offering this service, with many more expected to start in the next 2 weeks."

Damien Moore MP said:- "For free testing kits to be available at community Pharmacies is another step forward in ensuring the safety of our residents. Pharmacies in Southport have also been integral to the vaccination process which this Government has overseen; this important contribution will help us in sticking to the Prime Minister's roadmap to ease lockdown restrictions."


3 weeks of strikes announced at the University of Liverpool

THE University of Liverpool will be hit with three weeks of strikes, as nearly 1300 University and College Union (UCU) members are expected to down tools from Monday 24 May to Friday 11 June 2021, unless the University halts planned job cuts. Staff will be on strike every working day during the following weeks:-

Monday, 24 May to Friday, 28 May 2021.

Tuesday, 1 June to Friday, 4 June 2021.

Monday, 7 June to Friday, 11 June 2021.

The strikes are set to go ahead during the crucial end of year examination period, meaning disruption for the university will be especially severe. Action short of strike also begins today, which includes only working to contracted hours and boycotting all voluntary activities. The action comes after 84% of members who voted in a ballot last month backed strike action to fight the University's plans to slash teaching and research jobs in the faculty of health and life sciences. The university originally intended to sack up to 47 staff. This has now been revised down to 32 after UCU threatened industrial action. Liverpool's management has also revised the original selection criteria it had intended to use to rank and sack the staff. This relied on the use of flawed data to assess performance and was widely criticised by experts. But the revised criteria remain opaque, lack transparency and the university has refused to tell staff what data it is using to choose who to sack. This means that people threatened with redundancy have no idea what targets they have to meet to keep their jobs.

UCU Regional official Martyn Moss said:- "More than 1 thousand University of Liverpool staff are set to go on strike for 3 weeks in the middle of the crucial end of year exam period. The University has 2 weeks to stop its senseless attack on jobs and withdraw these proposals if it wants to halt the strike action."

University of Liverpool UCU branch president Anthony O'Hanlon said:- "While we welcome the abandonment of the doomed journal citation metric, and the protection of 15 jobs as a result of the work of the branch, the situation remains equally dangerous for our members and for the sector more widely. The criteria have been designed to place maximum discretion in the hands of managers to attack jobs and threaten livelihoods in the midst of a Pandemic. There is no economic or moral justification for these redundancies. To prevent a campaign of sustained industrial action, all the university has to do is withdraw them."


Health leaders in Sefton support Type 2 diabetes prevention week

DURING Type 2 diabetes prevention week that took place over 10 May to 16 May 2021, health professionals in Sefton have been raising awareness of how living a healthier lifestyle can prevent the risk of developing the condition. There are 12.3 million people in the UK at increased risk of developing Type 2 diabetes, but there are steps you can take to reduce your risk. You can prevent Type 2 diabetes by eating a healthy, balanced diet, maintaining a healthy weight and keeping physically active. People living with Type 2 diabetes face a significantly higher risk of dying with Covid19 and the condition can also lead to heart disease and stroke, as well as vision loss and blindness.

Dr Nigel Taylor, diabetes lead for NHS South Sefton Clinical Commissioning Group (CCG) and NHS Southport and Formby CCG, said:- "People with Type 2 diabetes don't produce enough insulin or the insulin they produce doesn't work properly. Around 90 per cent of the 3.8 million people diagnosed with diabetes are living with Type 2. There are almost 1 million more people living with Type 2 diabetes, who don't know they have it because they haven't yet been diagnosed. While other factors like age and ethnicity affect a person's risk of developing Type 2 diabetes, being overweight is the most significant risk factor that can be changed."

There are some groups at higher risk of Type 2 diabetes:- men, people of South Asian or Black ethnicity, people who are overweight and people with a family history of Type 2 diabetes. Find out your risk of Type 2 diabetes by using the Diabetes UK Know Your Risk Score at:- Riskscore.Diabetes.Org.UK or by searching 'Know Your Risk.'

If your score comes back as:- 'at risk,' sign up to your free local Healthier You programme via self referral. Or, if you think you or a family member may be at risk, ask at your GP practice about your free local Healthier You programme.

For patients living with diabetes, the My Diabetes My Wayinteractive website gives support for people who have diabetes and their family and friends. Once registered you can have access to view your diabetes related health records and tailored advice as well as information created by NHS experts in diabetes. You can ask your GP practice about registering for access to this support service.

The Sefton Diabetes and You programme for patients recently diagnosed with Type 2 diabetes offers education sessions to help people to manage their condition. If you have Type 2 diabetes and would like to attend, please request a referral from your GP or practice Nurse if you need 1. This service is currently operating remotely due to Covid19, but support is available for vulnerable patients. For more information on how to get involved please visit:- Diabetes.Org.UK.

 

 
      
 
   
 
 
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