NICE, the U.K.'s health care standards-setting organization, has changed its name but kept its acronym. Formerly the National Institute for Health and Clinical Excellence, the globally influential organization on April 1 became the National Institute for Health and Care Excellence. The name change reflects the institute's expanded role, set out in the U.K.'s Health and Social Care Act of 2012, in which the institute will now also publish guidance and standards on related to increasing quality of life and helping people live comfortably and independently. In line with the new role, NICE on April 3 released two quality standards for this new social care sector, "Supporting People with Dementia to Live Well" and "The Health and Wellbeing of Looked-After Children and Young People."
The institute also has a new chair, David Haslam, who succeeded Founding Chair Sir Michael Rawlins on April 1. Haslam, a general practitioner, previously served as national clinical advisor to...
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