This story was first published in digitalhealth.net

The network of emergency Nightingale hospitals established last year to handle the surge in coronavirus cases is to close from next month.
Set up last spring amid fears that the NHS might be overwhelmed, the temporary hospitals in England were largely not needed.
There were seven Nightingale hospitals built in England, starting in April 2020 with the 4,000-bed facility at London's ExCel centre. Another was set up in Belfast, while Scotland and Wales had their own temporary hospitals. The NHS has labelled them as the ‘ultimate insurance policy’.
An NHS spokesman said that as the health service learned more about coronavirus and how to successfully treat it, existing hospitals were able to adapt to increase critical care capacity.
Yorkshire's 500-bed hospital will close next month without treating a single patient. It will operate as a testing centre until then.
London's ExCel centre, which will remain open for vaccinations, treated 20 patients during the first wave of the pandemic. It reopened in January and was used to treat non-coronavirus patients to free up beds for a surge in coronavirus cases and other very seriously ill people.
This story was first published in digitalhealth.net
UK Building Regulations highlight toxic gas and smoke from layers of paint built up over multiple redecorations as a major cause of permanent ill health or death in a building fire.
Their concern rose with discovery the flame retardant paints most widely used paint along escape routes have been ones which to this day counter-productively use emission of heavy toxic gas to smother flames which rapidly spread along walls if layers of paint delaminate in a fire.
Northwich’s Victoria Infirmary (VIN) Community Diagnostic Centre (CDC) has enabled more patients
Adveco, the commercial hot water specialist, announces the launch of live metering of domestic ho
Sarah Greenslade, public affairs and communications officer at the British Parking Association looks at some of the problems and innovations in healthcare parking
It’s easy to assume that the comms team is there to handle press enquiries and the occasional social media storm – but the reality is that strategic communications can make a measurable impact across the entire organisation, from operational to financial, when done properly