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Physician assistant/associates (PAs) are healthcare professionals whose roles expand universal access across many nations. PAs fill medical provider supply and demand gaps. Our paper reports a forecasting project to predict the likely census of PAs in the medical workforce spanning from 2020 to 2035.

Microsimulation modelling of the American PA workforce was performed using the number of clinically active PAs employed in 2020 as the baseline. Graduation rates and PA programme expansion were parameters used to predict annual growth; attrition estimates balanced the equation. Two models, one based on data from the US Bureau of Labor Statistics (BLS) and another based on National Commission on Certification of Physician Assistants (NCCPA) data were used to estimate future annual PA census numbers.

As of 2020, the BLS estimated 125,280 PAs were in the medical workforce; the NCCPA estimate was 148,560 PAs in active practice. The BLS model predicted approximately 204,243 clinically active PAs by 2035; the NCCPA-based model predicted 214,248 PAs in clinical practice.

A PA predictive model based on four data sources projects that the 2035 census of clinically active PAs to be between 204,000 and 214,000 a growth rate of approximately 35%.

A PA predictive model based on four data sources projects that the 2035 census of clinically active PAs to be between 204,000 and 214,000 a growth rate of approximately 35%.

Hospital at Home (@Home) services bring the ward to the patient, providing acute care in the home. The @Home team adapted to support the care of patients with COVID-19 in the community who would otherwise have required hospitalisation.

An evidence-based guideline and treatment bundle (dexamethasone, oxygen, intravenous fluids and thromboprophylaxis) for managing severe COVID-19 was developed. Data were retrospectively extracted from notes of patients with COVID-19 admitted between 16 December 2020 to 14 February 2021, and service users contacted for feedback.

One-hundred and twenty-five adults with COVID-19 were treated by @Home; 42 severe (34%) and 83 non-severe (66%) infections; average length of stay was 7 days (interquartile range 4-8). Eight-hundred and seventy-five hospital-occupied bed days were saved. Service users emphasised the importance of being with loved ones and the value of respecting peoples' wishes to be at home.

@Home gave people with COVID-19 a choice of active treatment at home, thereby extending available healthcare capacity beyond the acute hospital setting.

@Home gave people with COVID-19 a choice of active treatment at home, thereby extending available healthcare capacity beyond the acute hospital setting.There are approximately 2,850 physician associates (PAs) in the UK, and this number is growing. https://www.selleckchem.com/products/acetalax-oxyphenisatin-acetate.html PAs are unable to prescribe due to an absence of statutory regulation and necessary prescribing legislation. While PAs cannot prescribe, they must have an adequate level of pharmacology knowledge to safely manage patients. There is an expectation that this is taught as part of the core syllabus on PA programmes. The Department of Health and Social Care (DHSC) recently announced the introduction of statutory regulation of Medical Associate Professionals (MAPs) that include PAs under the General Medical Council. With the introduction of regulation, PAs may be able to prescribe as part of their role. A working group is considering how this might be achieved in terms of education and supervision requirements, delivery of the training and scope of practice. This paper explores the current approach to delivering pharmacology across UK PA programmes. We evaluate what constitutes acceptable training and assessment, and determine if programmes have the capacity to prepare students for prescribing rights. We compare UK PA programmes with those in the USA, with the V300 Independent/Supplementary Prescribing course and with the Prescribing Safety Assessment examination.The COVID-19 pandemic has resulted in periods of remote working for some junior doctors, due to shielding and clinical vulnerability. This report offers practical guidance for junior doctors and their supervisors on how to make a period of remote working safe and effective, while maintaining education, training progression and morale. We outline specific challenges and practicalities that should be considered prior to commencing remote working and discuss what tasks and activities are best suited to a remote-working junior doctor. We offer a positive outlook that, with adequate support, a junior doctor can continue to progress in their training while working remotely, and can make a period of remote working an opportunity for personal and professional development while remaining an effective and valuable member of the clinical team.The high acuity of patients with COVID-19 during the pandemic in the city of New York correlated with an increased incidence of cardiac arrests and other emergent resuscitation scenarios requiring life-sustaining treatment. A spike in the utilisation of emergency crash cart medications was to be expected. The department of pharmacy at SUNY Downstate Health Sciences University optimised the use of an automated medication inventory management system with radio-frequency identification to assess usage and turnover of emergency crash carts; improve efficiency and turnaround times for crash cart dispatches; track drug consumption; and manage ongoing medication shortages during the peak of the COVID-19 pandemic. By capitalising on the utility and functionality of technology and automation, the institution was able to keep pace with acute patient care demands to prevent gaps in pharmaceutical care and medication management during emergency responses.With growing government investment and a thriving consumer market, digital technologies are rapidly transforming our means of healthcare delivery. These innovations offer increased diagnostic accuracy, greater accessibility and reduced costs compared with conventional equivalents. Despite these benefits, implementing digital health poses challenges. Recent surveys of healthcare professionals (HCPs) have revealed marked inequities in digital literacy across the healthcare service, hampering the use of these new technologies in clinical practice. Furthermore, a lack of appropriate training in the associated ethical considerations risks HCPs running into difficulty when it comes to patient rights. In light of this, and with a clear need for dedicated digital health education, we argue that our focus should turn to the foundation setting of any healthcare profession the undergraduate curriculum.Since the inception of the NHS, international medical graduates (IMGs) have been recognised as integral to the NHS long-term plan. These diverse groups of doctors make up approximately a fifth of all licensed doctors in the UK. The NHS has a history of reliance on IMGs to fill shortages and add to the workforce. IMGs face numerous challenges while immigrating and starting a new job in the UK. Conversely, the employing hospital has a responsibility to help their new IMGs adapt to the UK system of medical practice. Keeping the above-mentioned concerns in mind and hoping to tackle these issues faced by IMGs, a clinical attachment programme has been initiated at Ashford and St Peter's Hospitals NHS Foundation Trust (ASPH) by a group of clinicians, administration staff and the medical director. Although there are various pathways for an IMG to enter the healthcare system in the UK, the ASPH has provided an organised programme that promises to deliver high-quality doctors that value patient safety. This article outlines the programme that can be adopted by other NHS trusts to acculturate and have a positive impact on the IMGs' careers, as well as their work-life balance.Delirium is an acute confusional state due to physical illness and is a frequent cause of hospital admission. In this article, we describe the development and outcomes for a community delirium toolkit pilot across Greater Manchester during the COVID-19 pandemic. We conclude that delirium can be safely managed in the community by using a toolkit that incorporates structured assessment and management. Carers and patients benefited from the use of a co-designed information leaflet.Three south-London hospital trusts undertook a feasibility study, comparing data from 93 patients who received the 14-day adhesive ambulatory electrocardiography (ECG) patch Zio XT with retrospective data from 125 patients referred for 24-hour Holter for cryptogenic stroke and transient ischaemic attack following negative 12-lead ECG. As the ECG patch was fitted the same day as the clinical decision for ambulatory ECG monitoring was made, median time to the patient having the monitor fitted was significantly reduced in all three hospital trusts compared with 24-hour Holter being ordered and fitted. Hospital visits reduced by a median of two for patients receiving Zio XT. This project supports that it is feasible to use a patch as part of routine clinical care with a positive impact on care pathways.

The Baveno VI consensus identifies patients with compensated advanced chronic liver disease (cACLD) who can safely avoid screening endoscopy. However, concordance in clinical practice with this guidance is unknown. We audited clinical practice and the provision of transient elastography (TE) aiming to identify potential cost savings and benefits.

Retrospective data collection from 12 sites across London over 6 months by reviewing oesophagogastroduodenoscopy (OGD) reports, platelet count and TE results as well as information on site-specific provision of TE.

Three-hundred and fifty-one screening procedures were identified; 177 (50.43%) had a TE test performed within the preceding 12 months; 142 (80.23%) patients with a recent TE test did not meet criteria for screening OGD. TE provision varied widely between sites.

Improving concordance with the Baveno criteria through improved provision of TE would have benefits for patients, healthcare systems and the environment and would help to address the challenges of moving on from the COVID-19 pandemic.

Improving concordance with the Baveno criteria through improved provision of TE would have benefits for patients, healthcare systems and the environment and would help to address the challenges of moving on from the COVID-19 pandemic.

Infected coronary artery aneurysm with infected pericardial effusion is a very rare complication following percutaneous coronary intervention (PCI) and is associated with high mortality. Management options include open cardiothoracic surgery or non-operative management with pericardiocentesis. The best management option is currently unknown.

A 76-year-old man with a background of hypertension, type two diabetes mellitus, chronic kidney disease, and a pacemaker presented with worsening shortness of breath 5 weeks following PCI to the right coronary artery (RCA) for a non-ST elevation myocardial infarction. His blood cultures grew methicillin-sensitive

and he developed progressive renal failure and shortness of breath despite high-dose antibiotics. Echocardiography showed a pericardial effusion with impending tamponade and the patient proceeded urgently for pericardiocentesis. He subsequently developed severe cardiogenic and vasoplegic shock with multi-organ failure. Computed tomography coronary angiography (CTCA) showed an RCA aneurysm.

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