BMJ 2002;325:855 ( 19 October )

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News roundup

Nearly 900 more cardiologists needed because of cut in working hours

Patients with heart disease in the United Kingdom are still not getting an adequate level of care, with many never getting to see a specially trained doctor, says a report out this week.

The Fifth Report on the Provision of Services for Patients with Heart Disease, from the British Cardiac Society and the Royal College of Physicians, finds that although many aspects of coronary care have improved since 1993, when the last report was produced, others continue to flounder.

Some patients---especially those with coronary heart disease, for which there is a national service framework in England---are getting more attention from health planners. However, warns the report, patients with problems not included in the guide (such as heart muscle disease, complex heart rhythms, valvular heart disease, and congenital heart disease) are in danger of being forgotten.

Nearly 900 extra consultants will be needed by 2010 to compensate for a reduction in doctors' hours with the introduction of the European Working Time Directive, the report says.

Zosia Kmietowicz, London

Footnotes

The report has been published as a supplement to the November issue of the journal Heart (2002;88 (suppl 3)).


© BMJ 2002

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