Northumberland pharmacy hours May 2023

May 2023 pharmacy hours

Northumberland pharmacy hours May 2023

With several bank holidays taking place in May 2023, don’t forget to make sure you have the medication you need, by ordering repeat prescriptions in plenty of time and stocking up on painkillers and other items you may find useful to have at home.

Pharmacies across the county may have different opening hours on:

  • May Day Bank Holiday Monday 1 May
  • King’s Coronation – Saturday 6 May
  • Coronation Bank Holiday Monday 8 May
  • Spring Bank Holiday Monday 29 May

View the bank holiday opening hours for pharmacies in Northumberland

For help and advice outside of opening hours please contact NHS 111.

We are currently asking customers of Lloyds pharmacy in Sainsubury’s Cramlington, to tell us how the planned closure of the pharmcy summer might effect. Please tell us your views.

If you need information about pharmacy services or would like to tell us your experiences of using your local pharmacy, please get in touch.

 

Health and social care feedback Northumberland March 2023

What you told us March 2023

Health and care feedback in Northumberland March 2023

During March you continued to share your concerns about NHS dental provision in the county, GP appointments and mental health services.

We launched our ‘How are you feeling?’ young people’s campaign with a number of local high schools helping to share the information with students.

To investigate why a higher proportion of children aged 0-5 in the Blyth area attend A&E compared to those elsewhere in Northumberland, we held focus groups with Blyth residents as part of a joint piece of work with Blyth Primary Care Network. The report will follow shortly.

Read our short monthly report to see at a glance who we heard from during the month and the services they fed back on.

What you tell us helps us build a picture of what is working well and where there are issues in services, and is taken into account by those providing services when making decisions about local care.

Healthwatch Northumberland report March 2023

Engagement and Volunteering Officer vacancy

We’re recruiting for an Engagement and Volunteering Officer to join our team!

Hours: 25 hours per week

Contract: Permanent (dependent on funding)

Location: Based in Hexham with travel across Northumberland

Salary: £24,396 pro rata – £16,483 actual for 25 hours. Pay award pending

Benefits: 25 days holiday per year, plus statutory holidays pro rata

 

Healthwatch Northumberland is the independent champion for health and social care across the county.

Health and social care are never far from the news and it’s an area that affects all of us. Come and join us to work as part of a skilled and enthusiastic team, listening to local people and ensuring their voice is heard in how these vital services are planned and delivered.

It’s a busy time. You can make a difference by supporting our current volunteers and encouraging other people to get involved in our work.

Find out more about this role in the Engagement and Volunteering Officer job description.

To apply please complete the online application form.

Closing date for applications is 9.00am Monday 22 May 2023.

Interviews will be on Wednesday 7 June 2023 in Hexham.

If you would like an informal discussion about the role and Healthwatch Northumberland, contact Derry Nugent, Project Coordinator by email derryn@healthwatchnorthumberland.co.uk  or call 07590 880016.

This opportunity has now closed

Healthwatch Northumberland Board Chair recruitment

Chair of the Board vacancy

We’re recruiting for a new Chair

Healthwatch Northumberland is the independent champion for health and social care across the county. We’re looking for someone to become the new Chair of the Healthwatch Northumberland Board.

Health and social care are never far from the news and it’s an area that affects all of us. It’s an important time to be involved with Healthwatch and this is a great opportunity for someone who wants to champion the patient voice in how the county’s health and social care services are planned and delivered.

Our new Chair will lead the board in setting and overseeing our strategy and chair our quarterly board meetings. They will also attend high-level external meetings, such as the Health and Wellbeing Board, and act as an ambassador for Healthwatch Northumberland.

The role involves a minimum of three working days per month, plus occasional weekend and evening work, and is therefore remunerated at £9000 per year plus out-of-pocket expenses.

Want to know more?

Read all the details of this opportunity, including the person specification in the Chair Recruitment Information Pack.

Watch Project Coordinator Derry Nugent explain more about this opportunity.

How do I apply and what happens then?

Complete the online application form addressing the person specification but really say why you want to join us. Applications will be shortlisted based on these criteria.

All applications must be received by 9.00am on 4 May 2023.

If a written application is not appropriate for you, an interview-only assessment may be carried out. Please contact Derry Nugent:
derryn@healthwatchnorthumberland.co.uk to arrange.

Invitations to interview will be emailed to shortlisted candidates. Interviews will be held on Tuesday 23 May 2023.

The interviews will be in person at the Adapt (NE) offices in Hexham.

This opportunity has now closed

Healthwatch Northumberland feedback February 2023

Feedback report February 2023

Health and care feedback February 2023

Our monthly reports provide an overview of the feedback we have had and who we’ve been hearing from. In our February 2023 ‘at-a-glance’ report you can read some examples of positive and negative feedback we received and what our main focus has been throughout the month.

 

Healthwatch Northumberland feedback report February 2023

 

Tell us YOUR experiences

Sick child and thermometer

Healthier Together

The Healthier Together website is full of useful health advice for parents, carers, young people and health professionals. All of the information has been approved by clinicians so it’s a great place to go for reliable advice.

Topics include common illnesses in babies and children, when to keep your child off school/nursery, support for young people and a guide to how the NHS works.

Healthier Together

If you need some help finding local health and care information or support, please get in touch.

Mother and baby next to a window

Postnatal checks failing many

Thank you to everyone who told us about their experiences of maternal mental health care. Healthwatch England has analysed the responses shared by 2,693 new mothers and birthing parents since April 2020 and you can read the findings below.

The analysis suggests that not all GP practices comply with the requirement to provide six to eight-week postnatal checks. And where those checks take place, it is not clear that GP practices are aware of NICE guidance which tells them in detail how to spot mental health problems and provide help.

Key findings

  • Over one in 10 (16%) of new mothers and birthing parents who shared their experiences said they hadn’t received the six to eight-week check.
  • Of those who said they had been offered the postanal check, only one in five, 22%, were satisfied with the time their GP spent talking to them about their mental health.
  • Nearly half, 44%, of respondents felt that the GP did not spend enough time talking to them about their mental health, while a third, 30%, said that their GP didn’t mention this during the check.
  • One in seven, 15%, said they had had their six-week check over the phone, with many new parents finding it hard to verbalise their mental health struggles and discuss physical issues. In the worst cases, respondents felt the way their mental health issues were discussed was inappropriate and potentially harmful.

Six-week postnatal checks

In April 2020, the Government introduced the six to eight-week postnatal check after Healthwatch England shared the experiences of almost 1,800 women on mental health during their journey to parenthood.

General practitioners in England have since been contractually obliged and paid to assess new mothers’ mental health and wellbeing, providing an opportunity for referral to specialist services and additional support. Crucially, the checks must take place separately from a postnatal check focused on the health of the baby.

The latest research took place between October and December of 2022 to find out to what extent mental health support has improved during and after pregnancy.

Experiences of mental health support during and post-pregnancy

  • Two-thirds, 1800, of the women and birthing parents who shared their experiences had struggled with their mental health during and after pregnancy.
  • Nearly half of those, 41%, received no support to help with their mental health during and post-pregnancy.
  • Delays in accessing mental health support can have a devastating impact on new parents, with some reporting they had struggled to leave the house, bond with their child and maintain relationships.
  • First-time mothers are particularly vulnerable to developing mental health problems and are less likely to access timely care.

Louise Ansari, National Director at Healthwatch England said: “With mental ill health affecting up to a third of new and expectant mums, six-week postnatal checks are key to assessing their wellbeing after the birth. If left untreated, poor mental health can have a devastating impact on new parents and their families.

“Unfortunately, our findings show that although most new mothers and birthing parents are likely to be invited to a postnatal consultation, these are frequently carried out as a tick-box exercise, where mental health is not treated as a priority or not assessed at all.

“Monitoring the delivery of six-week checks should be the first step to ensuring there’s a consistent approach to offering quality mental health support to all new mothers. NHS England should consider what additional support and guidance it can provide to GPs so that the help new parents get is of the best quality.

“We also need to ensure that maternal mental health and peri-natal services continue to remain on the government’s agenda and a priority in workforce planning and funding budgets.”

Recommendations

Healthwatch England has made five recommendations to help ensure every new mother and birthing parent receives the six-week check, and that it is of the highest quality:

  1. Integrated Care Systems (ICSs) should monitor the delivery of six to eight-week postnatal consultations as part of their primary care commissioning responsibilities.
  2. The Medical Licensing Assessment being introduced from 2024 should check understanding of the importance of postnatal mental health and the mental health element of postnatal checks.
  3. The section of the GP contract on delivery of postnatal consultations should be updated to include mention of signposting to specialist and community mental health services and point to best practice guidance around carrying out open-ended discussions.
  4. As part of its Maternity Transformation Programme, NHS England should consider what additional support and guidance it can provide for GPs to have quality conversations about mental health at the six to eight-week postnatal consultation.
  5. Deliver the Long-Term Plan commitments on improving access to specialist community perinatal mental health services.

 

Find maternity and parenting information and support

Get in touch to tell us about your experiences

NHS dentistry in Northumberland

NHS dentistry in Northumberland

As part of our work on NHS dentistry services in Northumberland, we, along with 29 other Local Healthwatch, made a formal submission to the House of Commons Health and Social Care Committee.  The committee has now published the submissions.

The Chair of the Committee, Conservative MP Steve Brine, was interviewed on the BBC Radio 4 PM programme on 6 March. The item is at 38 minutes in, with reference to Local Healthwatch just after 42 minutes.

In the interview Mr Brine says “We’ve had hundreds of pieces of written evidence from trade bodies, professionals, charities, people working in the profession, but quite a lot of it has been from local Healthwatch and from patients themselves, telling some pretty painful stories of…DIY dentistry…home tooth extractions, people tying shoelaces to teeth…”

At the Overview and Scrutiny Committee meeting on 7 March, our Project Coordinator Derry Nugent, urged local elected members to encourage their residents to contact us for issues such as this, which can only be fixed at national level.

NHS dentistry in Northumberland continues to be difficult to access, especially in the Berwick area. If you are in pain and need to see a dentist urgently, please call NHS 111.

Please keep sharing your experiences of NHS dental care, so that we can keep making sure these are heard by those paying for services.

 

Healthwatch logo with health and social care graphics

Integrated care strategy in our area