Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
"Catch it, Bin it, Kill it" is a slogan [2] and the name associated with Public Health England's (PHE) annual public awareness campaigns for flu and norovirus. [3] [4] [5] The slogan appears on a downloadable poster, published by PHE and particularly targeted at primary care services in the UK.
It has local groups which are involved in campaigns against the closure or reorganisation of local hospitals, such as the Save Lewisham Hospital Campaign. [3] It attracted support from many existing health related campaigns such as Save Finsbury Health Centre [4] It has been very vocal in denouncing the use of private health providers to treat ...
The body is a successor organisation to Public Health England, and is responsible for health improvement and public health functions along with NHS England, as outlined in correspondence on the location of Public Health England functions from 1 October 2021. [2]
Change4Life is a public health programme in England which began in January 2009, [1] run by Public Health England. It was the country's first national social marketing campaign to tackle the causes of obesity. [2] In 2021, it was brought under the "Better Health" brand [3]
the use of health technologies within England's National Health Service (NHS) (such as the use of new and existing medicines, treatments and procedures) clinical practice (guidance on the appropriate treatment and care of people with specific diseases and conditions) guidance for public sector workers on health promotion and ill-health avoidance
The WHO's 1986 Ottawa Charter for Health Promotion and then the 2005 Bangkok Charter for Health Promotion in a Globalized World defines health promotion as "the process of enabling people to increase control over their health and its determinants, and thereby improve their health". [2] Health promotion is a multifaceted approach that goes ...
Public Health England has been criticised for downplaying mental health within its overall resourcing and agenda; in 2011 the Royal College of Psychiatrists, commenting on the plan to create PHE, stated its concern that there appeared to be "few, or no, commitments or resources within either the Department of Health or Public Health England to ...
In February 2016 NHS organisations in England, both Clinical Commissioning Groups and NHS trusts, were grouped into 44 footprints which were each required to produce joint plans with their local authorities for health and health service transformation for the period up to 2020. Each had a leader, some from the NHS and some from local authorities.