Runcorn & Widnes Weekly News

Sepsis skills roll-out

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HEALTH staff across Halton could be trained up to spot the signs and symptoms of sepsis as part of a new NHS plan to improve treatment of the condition.

Jeremy Hunt has announced new measures to help combat the ‘silent killer’.

A Department Of Health spokesman said sepsis kills around 37,000 people in England every year.

Triggered by an infection, it causes the body’s immune system to go into overdrive, setting off a series of reactions that can lead to organ failure and, in some cases, death. In 2015 the NHS launched the first national action plan to tackle sepsis across England and focused on hospitals and GP surgeries. The new announceme­nt covers the wider health system including nurses, care home staff and pharmacist­s.

They will be told how to check for signs and symptoms of sepsis.

It aims to reduce the number of people affected by the condition while also improving how sepsis is tracked and recorded.

Health secretary Mr Hunt said: “We want the NHS to be the safest healthcare system in the world, and our ability to diagnose and treat sepsis effectivel­y is a key litmus test of progress.

“While the NHS has taken major steps in recent years to improve how it responds to sepsis – actions that have saved nearly 1,000 lives – there is still more work to do to protect the many thousands who develop this dangerous condition each year.

“We need every part of our health system on the highest possible alert for sepsis, and this new plan will ensure more health profession­als get the training, advice and targeted support to tackle this silent killer.”

The new measures include a clear definition of adult sepsis for clinicians so sepsis is identified and recorded more quickly.

Others include educationa­l materials to ensure awareness among all primary care, pharmacist­s and health care profession­als, and targeting care homes, pharmacist­s and other areas of the NHS which deal with frail and older people to prevent sepsis.

NHS England’s national medical director Sir Bruce Keogh said: “Since the publicatio­n of our first plan in 2015 a lot has been done and this additional set of proposed actions reflects the desire of health profession­als to tackle this dangerous condition.”

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