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Jargon Buster A-Z
 

IMPRESS NHS JARGON BUSTER  - SCROLL DOWN TO A-Z SEARCH

Third edition of the Jargon Buster  available in hard copy and here as pdf (April 2010)  Does not take account of post-election changes. The online version is updated periodically to take account of these.

There is short Social Care and Housing Jargon Buster  available from IMPRESS too, with thanks to the Long Term Conditions Delivery Support Team.    All the terms are in the A-Z as well.

 Please note that a number of the DH websites, including NHS Evidence, were reviewed post-Election May 2010, and so some links may not work.  If this is the case, please contact us to let us know and we'll correct quickly.

IMPRESS NHS JARGON BUSTER

Introduction

The Jargon Buster A-Z (see below) aims to provide a simple guide to the many  terms in the NHS in England that describe how healthcare and social care will be planned, measured and paid for.  Some of the terms also apply to Wales, Scotland and Northern Ireland.   They highlight the relevance for delivering respiratory care.

We would also highly recommend the Junior Doctors Guide to the NHS.  This is a very helpful guide for all who work in the NHS.    As a guide for junior doctors, we would hope that future editions might also include something on the  building blocks of coding, financial flows and casemix complexity because it is often the junior doctors who take on the responsibility of setting the coding standard from day one of discharge and this is a key responsibility, since it is this coding activity that drives planning.  However, IMPRESS can highly recommend the commentary in our guide to Respiratory Coding to fill this gap.

Before starting the alphabetical glossary you may find it helpful to look at Figure 1 that describes how the various policies contribute to the three main policy aims to:

•    improve patient care, and particularly to reduce inequalities in access to care,
•    improve the patient’s experience of services
•    achieve better value for money. 

Whilst this figure is updated in new Conservative policy, the basic direction remains the same.

A-Z

  
Jargon Buster A-Z

   Filters:  #   A   B   C   D   E   F   G   H   I   J   K   L   M   N   O   P   Q   R   S   T   U   V   W   X   Y   Z   All

Year of Care

The Year of Care approach puts people with long term conditions firmly in the driving seat of their care and supports them to self manage.  It does this firstly by making routine consultations between clinicians and people with long term conditions truly collaborative through care planning, and then ensures that the local services people need to support this are identified and made available through commissioning.   See here for videos, scripts for use with patients and detailed evaluation; the site is endorsed by NHS Evidence.

 See also IMPRESS personalising care web pages.

 

Related Words  Co-production Personalisation (health and social care)Personalised care planning

Your Health Your Way

Previously known as the Patients’ Prospectus.  Launched in England by the DH in November 2008, it aims to inform the public about how their local NHS will discuss with them the choices that are available to help them self-care as part of the supporting people with long term conditions programme.

Five areas of self care have been identified as being key to achieving these aims:

  1. Information prescriptions: not tested in COPD yet, but written asthma action plans have well-documented effectiveness
  2. Skills and knowledge training e.g.EPP or condition specific: Pulmonary rehabilitation is an effective intervention and needs to be made available to all those for whom it would be impactful.  Also Expert Patient programmes for asthma.
  3. Tools and self-monitoring devices including assistive technology: COPD self-management plans have a cautious endorsement from the most recent Cochrane review.
  4. Healthy lifestyle choices: eg smoking cessation: The most important risk factor for COPD is smoking, followed by other aspects of social deprivation, diet and occupational exposure to dust, indoor pollution such as smoke from wood and coal fires, and, in a small number of cases, inherited faulty genes.  So, prioritise smoking cessation and dietetic advice for those with low and high BMIs. Smoking stops certain asthma medications working and smoke can trigger asthma symptoms so smoking cessation programmes are a priority.  These should include strategies to reduce maternal smoking
  5. Support networks eg Breathe Easy Groups and Asthma UK helpline.

    Guidance for the social care workforce is being taken forward through the adult social care workforce strategy.  DH will monitor uptake of care planning routinely through the quarterly GP Patient Survey.

Related Words  Personalisation (health and social care)Personalised care planning Self CareSupported self care/self management

     
NHS Jargon Buster

The last printed version (please note the online version is more up to date) of the IMPRESS NHS Jargon Buster (pdf) is available to download here

  
Jargon Buster - HTML version
  
IMPRESS is grateful to  its corporate supporters - AstraZeneca, Boehringer Ingelheim/Pfizer and GlaxoSmithKline who provide grants for this independent programme of study
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