Clin Med
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Lyme disease is rare in the U. K. but there is evidence of an increase in both prevalence of, and patient concern about, the infection. There are no published data characterising Lyme disease as it is seen in the U. ⋯ Screening enzyme immunoassay tests were negative in 39% and reference laboratory immunoblots were negative in 31% of patients, principally those with early infection. The majority of patients were cured with one course of antibiotic treatment, three patients had evidence of persistent infection after treatment and two required intravenous therapy. No cases of chronic Lyme disease were seen.
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The challenge of generating bed availability is constant in most NHS acute trusts. Building on previous work applying queue theory, this paper now takes operational data from one NHS trust, collected over a period of more than a year, to provide an evidence base and to establish the practical challenges associated with demand variation and managing length of stay. The problem is split into three separate parts. ⋯ Patients who stay for longer than one to two days contribute most significantly to the observed weekly bed availability problem. The problems associated with bed shortages around Christmas time and into the New Year are not simply issues of increased demand. A reduction in discharge capacity is a major contributory factor that results in unnecessary increases in length of stay.