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kevin
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Joined: 09/03/2009

kevin
kevin's picture
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Last seen: 51 weeks 1 day ago
Joined: 09/03/2009
What are National Service Frameworks?

National Service Frameworks (NSFs) set national healthcare standards. They are designed to improve the quality of health services and ensure that everyone gets the same level of care.

The two main roles of NSFs are:

  • setting clear quality requirements for care based on the best available evidence, and
  • offering strategies and support to help health organisations achieve these standards.

Each NSF sets a target for improving the standard of care and the associated healthcare outcomes related to that care. For example, the target for the Coronary Heart Disease NSF is to reduce death from heart disease and strokes by 40% by 2010.

Aims and objectives of NSFs

NSFs can have a number of different aims and objectives. For example, the diabetes NSF has strategies to reduce the risk of developing type 2 diabetes, identify diabetes in people who are not aware that they have the condition, and improving overall diabetes care.

The NSF for older people has strategies to tackle ageism, and to address conditions commonly related to older people, such as strokes.

The mental health NSF focuses on the safety of people with mental health problems, their carers, and the public. Key objectives include ensuring that mental health services are accessible to those who need them, are non-discriminatory, and offer choices that promote independence.

Structure of NSFs

NSFs are designed to be inclusive and are developed in partnership with health professionals, patients, carers, health service managers, voluntary agencies, charities, and other experts.

This is why each NSF is developed with an External Reference Group (ERG). To ensure that a wide variety of views are considered, ERGs are made up of both health professionals and patients, and they are managed by the Department of Health.

At present, there are NSFs in the areas of cancer, paediatric intensive care, diabetes, high blood pressure, coronary heart disease, mental health, renal services, long-term conditions, children, and older people.

A new NSF about chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD) is expected to be published during 2008.

Further information:

 

Last reviewed: 17/03/2008

Next review due: 16/03/2010

http://www.nhs.uk/chq/Pages/1080.aspx?CategoryID=68&SubCategoryID=153

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