logo
NHS warns 'call 999' for this chest symptom in the hot weather

NHS warns 'call 999' for this chest symptom in the hot weather

Daily Mirrora day ago
As temperatures remain high in the UK, Brits are vulnerable to the risks of heat stroke.
Brits have been warned to "call 999 now" if they notice a potentially dangerous hot weather symptom in the chest. With the UK experiencing temperatures this summer, it remains vital to recognise any indicators of heat stroke.

The NHS states that heat exhaustion can escalate into heatstroke without prompt treatment. "Heat exhaustion does not usually need emergency medical help if you can cool down within 30 minutes," the health body said.

On its website, the NHS warns that you should "call 999 now if you or someone else has signs of heatstroke". One such sign is a fast heartbeat.

You should also seek emergency help if the person is still unwell after 30 minutes of resting in a cool place, being cooled, and drinking fluids.
Additional heatstroke symptoms that require a 999 call are:.
A very high temperature
Hot skin that's not sweating and might look red (this can be harder to see on brown and black skin)
Fast breathing or shortness of breath
Confusion and lack of coordination
A seizure or fit
Loss of consciousness
The NHS advises, "Put the person in the recovery position if they lose consciousness while you're waiting for help." Before it progresses into heatstroke, the warning signs of heat exhaustion to identify include:
Tiredness
Dizziness
Headache
Feeling sick or being sick
Cramps in the arms, legs, and stomach
Excessive sweating and skin becoming pale and clammy, or getting a heat rash
Fast breathing or heartbeat
A high temperature
Being very thirsty
Weakness

The symptoms of heat exhaustion are often the same in adults and children, although children may also become irritable, the health body warned.
What to do if someone has symptoms
If someone you know is displaying indicators of heat exhaustion, they must be cooled down and given fluids.

The NHS recommends you follow these four steps: You should remain with them until they've recovered, which should take about half an hour. However, if this doesn't work, you may need to dial 999.
Avoiding heatstroke
"There's a high risk of heat exhaustion or heatstroke during hot weather or exercise," warns the NHS. To help prevent heat exhaustion or heatstroke, the health organisation advises you to:
Drink more cold drinks, especially if you're active or exercising
Wear light-coloured, loose clothing
Avoid the sun between 11am and 3pm
Avoid excess alcohol
Avoid extreme exercise
If you're inside on a very hot day, close curtains, close windows if it's hotter outside than in your home and turn off electrical equipment and lights that get hot
'This will also prevent dehydration and help your body keep itself cool,' the NHS added.
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

SNP admits promised hearing care cash already spent elsewhere
SNP admits promised hearing care cash already spent elsewhere

Sunday Post

timean hour ago

  • Sunday Post

SNP admits promised hearing care cash already spent elsewhere

Get a weekly round-up of stories from The Sunday Post: Thank you for signing up to our Sunday Post newsletter. Something went wrong - please try again later. Sign Up Thousands of Scots will be left to suffer in silence after the SNP abandoned a manifesto pledge to overhaul hearing services, we can reveal. Scottish Government ministers have been branded a 'disgrace' after admitting they will not deliver on a promise made before the last Holyrood election to raise community audiology services on a par with eye care. We revealed previously how experts believe that Scotland's ballooning backlog for hearing services could be cleared for just £9 million by switching to a community model – which would mean moving some care from hospitals to the high street. Specsavers, one of the country's largest private providers, said it could wipe out the delay in just three years with no capital expenditure or other set-up costs for the NHS. But last night furious political rivals demanded action after the SNP's public health minister, Jenni Minto, admitted money that should have been ringfenced for community hearing care had already been spent elsewhere. No more cash left In a letter to Conservative MSP Douglas Lumsden, seen by The Sunday Post, Minto acknowledged too many people are still waiting too long for health appointments and insisted the ­government is determined to do more. She said ministers are continuing to focus delivery on the action required to respond to a damning independent review of services from two years ago. However, she admitted there is simply no more cash to roll out a community hearing service. In one section, Minto states: 'We acknowledge the impact of unaddressed hearing loss on cognitive decline, levels of loneliness, isolation and unemployment' adding that the government 'remains committed to enhancing audiology services, and to its vision for an integrated, community-based audiology service. © Sandy McCook / DC Thomson 'You will be aware that unfortunately, the rephasing of funds has meant that not all challenges in primary care can be addressed in a single budget and no provision has been made for a community hearing service at this time.' Official records show at least 71,000 patients were added to audiology waiting lists last year – although the true figure is likely to be much higher as NHS Greater Glasgow and Clyde said its 'very old' system prevented it from providing details. Some people have faced waits of up to three and a half years to access hearing loss treatment on the NHS, despite experts warning it could lead to isolation and life-changing health complications. We have reported previously how routine hearing care could reduce falls among older adults by almost a third, as well as warnings of a link between hearing loss and dementia. Calls for community audiology Politicians have long urged the Scottish Government to pilot community-based audiology services, similar to those used for optometry. Schemes like that are already running in England and a number of other countries. But in Scotland, an independent probe into audiology services in 2023 uncovered systemic failures and raised concerns over staffing and the quality of testing to identify deafness in very young children. Clinicians previously warned that the government could try to use the review as an excuse to 'kick down the road' its pledge to implement a community service. Lumsden, an MSP for the North East region, described Minto's response as 'yet another broken promise in the SNP's woeful manifesto'. © DC Thomson He said: 'The response from Jenni Minto is nothing short of disgraceful at a time when thousands of patients are having to suffer in silence. 'SNP ministers have forced patients to seek private audiology appointments because of their failure to bring down the appalling waiting times that exist across our NHS. 'Grampian, which has longer waiting lists and an older demographic than other parts of the country, would be the ideal place for a pilot into community audiology care. 'We provided common-sense solutions that would drastically cut waiting times for children and vulnerable older people with potential hearing loss, but the SNP have snubbed it with little care for those who desperately need the help. 'Rather than sweeping this serious issue under the carpet, the SNP must heed our calls by properly investing in frontline care to make our health service accessible for all who need it.'

Peter Kyle: 'My dad was stuck in hospital bed in lead up to death - tech can fix crisis'
Peter Kyle: 'My dad was stuck in hospital bed in lead up to death - tech can fix crisis'

Daily Mirror

timean hour ago

  • Daily Mirror

Peter Kyle: 'My dad was stuck in hospital bed in lead up to death - tech can fix crisis'

Peter Kyle has said his late dad would sometimes be stuck in a hospital bed waiting to be discharged for more than a day as he announces new tech to speed up the process Peter Kyle has said his late dad would sometimes be stuck in a hospital bed waiting to be discharged for more than a day as he announces new tech to speed up the process. ‌ The Technology Secretary knows all too well the pain and anxiety of waiting for doctors to sign off forms to release patients after seeing the reality of it in the lead up to his dad's death last year. ‌ The Cabinet minister is touting a new artificial intelligence tool being trialled in an NHS hospital that he says could cut the time it takes to discharge a patient from 'many, many hours to just a couple of minutes'. ‌ The AI-assisted tool helps doctors draft discharge documents faster by extracting key details from medical records, such as diagnoses and test results, using a large language model. It frees up time-pressed doctors to spend more time providing urgent care instead of doing admin, as well as meaning patients can go home or be referred to other care services faster. The new tool is part of Keir Starmer 's AI Exemplars programme - projects backed by the PM that use AI to modernise services across health, justice, tax and planning. Speaking from London's Chelsea and Westminster hospital, where the pilot is taking place, Mr Kyle told The Mirror: 'I lost my dad last year, and in the couple of years leading up to losing him, he spent quite a bit of time in hospital, and me and my brother in particular spent a lot of time with him, going into hospital, seeing him, being with him in hospital, but there were a couple of times when the point of discharge took longer than a day. ‌ 'Now, there were lots of reasons for it. He had a lot of medical issues towards the end of his life, but there were times when we were told that he would be released on one day, and sometimes the release didn't come for two or three days. 'That was quite often. Because he had many complications, different parts of the health service weren't talking to each other to get everything signed in time to get him out of hospital. ‌ 'He received great care by great people, but technology is the tool that will make those great people even greater in the interests of patients.' He added: 'When people have gone through lying in a bed, the uncertainty, the anxiety, the pain, sometimes the real discomfort that comes with time in hospital, right at the point where you're seeing the finish line, sometimes you're stuck there before getting across the line. 'So we want to make sure that that process is sped up as much as possible. That's what we're trialling here. And we think we can get that down from many, many hours to just a couple of minutes. That is significant progress.' Mr Kyle said he hopes to roll out the AI tool nationally once enough data and evidence is collected on the trial. ‌ The bed-blocking crisis has plagued the NHS for years, with a lack of capacity in social care often contributing to elderly or disabled patients staying in a hospital bed longer than needed. It has had a major knock-on-effect to A&E services, with doctors being forced to care for patients in corridors because there are not enough beds to admit them to wards. ‌ Dr Gary Davies, Chelsea and Westminster's Hospital Medical Director, said his NHS trust sends home around 100 patients a day - meaning a two-hour discharge delay per person could mean '200 hours of a bed being occupied by somebody that doesn't need to be there'. He said the early version of the AI tool they're trialling is already having an impact on medics' workloads, with doctors able to do a ward round and come back to multiple discharge summaries written by AI which they can then review and edit. He said it will also boost the morale of resident doctors who recently took strike action. 'They go through five, six years of medical school, they come really excited thinking they're going to be saving lives every day and actually spend a significant portion of their time filling in forms, writing discharge summaries, that type of thing,' he said. ‌ 'If we can take this admin burden away from them and get them actually going and seeing patients, I think it's going to have a considerable effect on morale.' Health Secretary Wes Streeting added: "This potentially transformational discharge tool is a prime example of how we're shifting from analogue to digital as part of our 10 Year Health Plan. ‌ 'Doctors will spend less time on paperwork and more time with patients, getting people home to their families faster and freeing up beds for those who need them most.' Another project announced this weekend as part of the PM's AI Exemplars programme, 'Justice Transcribe', will support Probation Officers to take notes in their meetings with offenders after they leave prison. The tech has been found to halve the time officers spent organising notes. The programme will also include the 'Extract' tool, which will speed up planning approvals by converting decades-old, handwritten planning documents and maps into data in minutes.

NHS patients to be discharged using AI notes for the first time
NHS patients to be discharged using AI notes for the first time

Telegraph

time2 hours ago

  • Telegraph

NHS patients to be discharged using AI notes for the first time

NHS patients will be discharged from hospital using notes made by AI for the first time. Information on a person's condition, care and medication will be made by AI and checked by a doctor to help speed up the process. Currently health workers have to deal with the laborious and time-consuming task of filling out notes, leading to prolonged time on wards. A trial at Chelsea and Westminster Hospital starting this autumn will kick off the three-month pilot project using live data for real patients. Officials hope this will help get patients home, free up doctors' time and create more beds for other patients while standardising the notes. The AI is a large language model (LLM) similar to ChatGPT but has been created in-house by the NHS. The Telegraph understands patient data will not be shared with third parties or used to train the computer model. The tool, called 'AI Discharge Summaries', is one of the Government's so-called 'AI exemplars' alongside technology which promises to halve the time probation officers spend organising notes and software to support teachers in marking and lesson planning. Wes Streeting, the Health Secretary, said: 'We're using cutting-edge technology to build an NHS fit for the future and tackle the hospital backlogs that have left too many people waiting too long. 'Doctors will spend less time on paperwork and more time with patients, getting people home to their families faster and freeing up beds for those who need them most.' Peter Kyle, the Technology Secretary, said: 'This is exactly the kind of change we need: AI being used to give doctors, probation officers and other key workers more time to focus on delivering better outcomes and speeding up vital services.' The AI tool for discharge summaries promises to improve efficiency within hospitals and provide medical staff with the 'gift of time'. The software enables doctors to draft discharge documents faster by using the LLM to find key information from medical records – such as diagnoses and test results. It aims to improve what has been described as an 'outdated system' in which busy hospital staff were forced to sit down and fill out forms. The Government hopes to use AI to 'modernise' services across health, justice, tax and planning. Elsewhere, technology will be rolled out to speed up planning approvals by converting hand-written documents into data within minutes. The Government claims this will slash the hours spent by planning officers who have to manually check such documents. The technology is one of a number of projects backed by Sir Keir Starmer. Earlier this year, the Prime Minister said AI will be used to 'turn around' the economy and public services. Referring to the entirety of AI exemplars – not just the NHS – Mr Kyle said when the scheme is rolled out in full, it will unlock some £45bn in 'productivity gains'.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store