Categories
Children Guidance Health Promotion Healthy Child including NCMP & CDO

Maximising the school nursing team contribution to the public health of school-aged children

By Department of Health (2014)

This guidance document provides a framework for local commissioners and providers of school nursing services. It aims to set out the core school nurse offer and the innovative ways that school nursing services can be commissioned and developed to meet local need to ensure effective, seamless delivery of public health for school-aged children and young people. This guidance supports the development of local service specifications.

Click here to view this guidance

Categories
Health Promotion Healthy Settings Oral Health Physical Activity

Time to #choosecycling: British cycling's vision for how Britain can become a true cycling nation

By British Cycling (2014)

This report, commissioned by British Cycling from Cambridge University, finds that if people replaced 5 minutes of the 36 minutes they spend each day in the car with cycling, there would be an almost 5% annual reduction in the health burden from inactivity-related illnesses including heart disease, diabetes, stroke and some cancers. It also argues that if 10% of trips in England and Wales were made by bike, the savings to the NHS of the top inactivity related illnesses would be at least £250 million per year.

Click here to view this report

Categories
Health Promotion Healthy Settings Library Licensing Planning Value

One person: one team: one system: report of the independent commission on whole person care

By Sir John Oldham, Chair of the Independent Commission on Whole Person Care (2014)

The emphasis of this report is recommendations for
an incoming Government in 2015. They are built on
three themes: giving meaningful power to people
using the health and care system; reorienting the
whole system around the true needs of the population
in the 21st century; and, addressing the biases in the
established system that prevent necessary change
happening. For too long health and social care have
been considered separately. They are inextricably
linked. However we do not believe the answer includes
yet another major structural reform at this time. The
scale of recent reforms so damaged the NHS and care
system that we believe it would not survive intact from
a further dose of structural change. We are not saying
that the current structures are right, or that they won’t
need to change in the future – they aren’t and they
on national organisations. However, relationships and
culture trump structures. We should not focus now on
what the structures are, but the relationships among
them, the people who work in them, and what they do.
This is the essence of care and what really matters.
These changes may not be as tangible and headline
grabbing as scrapping and creating organisations.
Arguably they are, taken together, more radical.

Click here to view this report

Categories
Commissioning Finance Health Promotion Licensing Planning Public Health Advice to NHS Commissioners Well-Being

'Any Town' toolkit

By NHS England (2014)

This toolkit uses high level health system modelling and allows CCGs to map how interventions could improve local health services and close the financial gap. It is an additional guide to help commissioners with their five-year strategic plans, showing how a typical CCG could achieve financial balance over the strategic period up to 2018/19. Using 2013/14 as a baseline, ‘Any town’ uses detailed data including population size and disease prevalence, to predict what a typical health system’s quality and financial baseline may look like in 2018/19.

Click here to view this toolkit

Categories
CVD Health Inequalities Health Promotion Integrated Care Liver Disease including NHS Health Checks Local Government Minority Groups Nutrition Obesity Respiratory Disease

Body mass index thresholds for intervening to prevent ill health among black, Asian and other minority ethnic groups

By NICE (2014)

This briefing recommends lowering BMI thresholds as a trigger for intervening to prevent ill health among adults from minority ethnicities. Further examples of recommendations include developing an integrated regional and local plan, and promoting early intervention among minority groups. It also suggests that by reconfiguring services to meet the health needs of their local populations, local authorities can reduce health inequalities and address the costs associated with ill health.

Click here to view this briefing

Categories
Good Practice Health Promotion Nutrition Obesity

Public Health England and Association of Directors of Public Health survey findings: tackling obesity

By Public Health England (2014)

In September 2013 Public Health England (PHE) surveyed 136 local authorities and Directors of Public Health on their obesity priorities. The following report gives an overview of the survey, findings and recommendations for reducing obesity in local communities.

Click here to view these findings

Categories
Guidance Health Promotion Healthy Settings Obesity Oral Health Physical Activity

Interventions to improve physical activity in socioeconomically disadvantaged women

By NICE (2013)

Overview: Lack of physical activity is a risk factor for chronic diseases, such as heart disease, stroke and diabetes. Physical inactivity in the UK has been estimated to have cost the NHS £0.9 billion in related ill health in 2006–07 (Scarborough et al. 2011).

Women are less likely to take part in physical activity than are men: only 28% of women in England meet the current recommended level of physical activity, compared with 40% of men (Start Active, Stay Active 2011). In addition, people from low socioeconomic groups have low rates of participation in physical activity (Kavanagh et al. 2005).

See the NICE Evidence Services topic page on physical activity for a general overview of the subject.

Current advice: The chief medical officers for the 4 UK nations recommend that all adults should aim to be active daily (UK physical activity guidelines 2011). Adults aged 19 years and over should do at least 150 minutes (2.5 hours) of moderate intensity physical activity a week, such as walking at 3–4 mph. Alternatively adults should complete 75 minutes of vigorous intensity activity spread across the week, such as cycling at 12–14 mph, or a combination of moderate and vigorous intensity activity.

NICE guidance on physical activity for adults in primary care recommends that adults who are not currently meeting the UK physical activity guidelines should be advised to do the recommended level of activity. These people should be provided with information about local opportunities to be physically active for people with a range of abilities, preferences and needs. NICE also has public health guidance on four commonly used methods to increase physical activity.

The NICE Pathway on physical activity brings together all related NICE guidance and associated products on the topic in a set of interactive topic-based diagrams.

New evidence: Cleland et al. (2013) did a systematic review and meta-analysis of trials that looked at interventions to increase physical activity in socioeconomically disadvantaged women. The authors searched for studies in women who had a low education status or a low income, were unemployed or in low status occupations, or who lived in an area of low socioeconomic status. A total of 19 studies, most of which were conducted in Europe and North America, were eligible for inclusion in the review. An initial random effects meta-analysis identified significant statistical heterogeneity, so the data could not be pooled to produce an overall measure of effect. Instead the authors conducted analyses of predefined factors that might influence the success of an intervention, such as setting and duration.

Delivery mode was the only factor found to have a significant effect on the success of an intervention to increase physical activity. Studies in which the intervention had a group component – such as group education meetings or practical sessions – found a greater difference between intervention and control groups (standardised mean difference [SMD] 0.36, 95% CI 0.17 to 0.54, p=0.0002) than studies in which the intervention was delivered individually (SMD –0.02, 95% CI –0.35 to 0.31, p=0.90) or in a community setting (SMD –0.02, 95% CI –0.10 to 0.05, p=0.58).

The authors estimated that this difference would be equivalent to an additional 70 minutes of physical activity a week for women in group interventions or an extra 1000 steps a day. The authors noted that most studies in their analysis used self-reported measures of physical activity and that only 5 of the 19 studies included had a low or medium risk of bias. Nevertheless they suggested that the use of group-based approaches is a key factor in interventions that successfully improve physical activity in socioeconomically disadvantaged women.

Commentary: “Evidence exists to support group interventions being successful for other public health measures compared with other interventions; for example, for people quitting smoking. However, it should be noted that group interventions are the format least likely to engage people in quitting, so personal preference needs factoring in. The level of preference for group interventions among the participants in the studies analysed here is not clear, because recruitment and drop out data are not included in a number of the studies.

“In addition, it is unclear whether the effect noted in this study was specifically the result of group approaches or whether the holistic nature of the intervention was the significant factor. Any future work should separate these aspects of intervention delivery.

“Practice in terms of approaches to increasing physical activity should not be changed solely on the basis of this study. The findings do, however, provide useful information for healthcare professionals considering options for increasing physical activity in communities of disadvantaged women. It would be helpful to have comparative cost effectiveness data between individual and group interventions to further support these deliberations.” – Elaine Michel, Director of Public Health, Derbyshire County Council

Study sponsorship: This study was not funded.

Categories
Guidance Health Promotion Healthy Settings Oral Health Physical Activity

Physical activity: brief advice for adults in primary care

By NICE (May 2013)

Click here to view this guidance

Categories
Health Promotion Nutrition Obesity

Obesity and the environment: increasing physical activity and active travel

By Public Health England (2013)

This briefing summarises the importance of action on obesity and a specific focus on active travel, and outlines the regulatory and policy approaches that can be taken.

Click here to view this briefing

Categories
Accident Prevention Care of the Elderly Community Community Safety Health Promotion Healthy Settings Licensing Planning Safeguarding Well-Being

Loneliness resource pack

By Joseph Rowntree Foundation (2013)

This set of resources aims to help individuals, groups, communities and neighbourhoods take a closer look at and to reduce loneliness. It includes a briefing on the causes of loneliness; guidance; and session plans.

Click here to view this resource pack