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opinions on ultrasis please? (ULT)     

WOODIE - 13 Feb 2004 10:36

after yesterdays agm statement the share price has risen 50% how much upside is left or is this another false dawn?graph.php?epic=ULTgraph.php?startDate=13%2F02%2F05&period=
http://www.alexa.com/data/details/traffic_details/thewellnessshop.co.uk
womans hour link below.
http://www.bbc.co.uk/radio4/womanshour/04/2008_08_mon.shtml

mcmahons - 28 Apr 2008 20:41 - 1277 of 1525

Thought this contract would have been larger for the West Midlands new it was on the cards a few weeks back. A bit disappointing in size however.
Watch out for Northern Ireland next.

Still if the baggies go up tonight and Wolves stay down the PCTs in Wolverhampton and Dudley will need to expand the contract !

WOODIE - 29 Apr 2008 07:43 - 1278 of 1525

http://www.ft.com/cms/s/0/97a4e302-1585-11dd-996c-0000779fd2ac.html
Shares in Ultrasis , the interactive healthcare software maker, rose 3.6 per cent to 1.4p on news that the majority of Primary Care Trusts in the West Midlands Strategic Health Authority had now contracted to provide the company's Beating the Blues product to all patients suffering from mild and moderate depression. The contracts will have an annual value in excess of 300,000, the company said.

elbow - 08 May 2008 23:47 - 1279 of 1525

Not doing it for me Woodie will cash in tomorrow richer pickings else where may be wrong expecting it down again tomorrow and next week. Hope you do well out of it.
Cheers ears.

odsalrob - 15 May 2008 12:04 - 1280 of 1525

So this is on the way down again, after the brief upward burst ?

kimoldfield - 15 May 2008 12:39 - 1281 of 1525

Without a meaningful RNS, I'm afraid this will be the trend.

WOODIE - 04 Jun 2008 07:06 - 1282 of 1525

Ultrasis plc




Beating the Blues now available for private patients




Ultrasis meets growing private demand for access to anxiety and depression therapy




Ultrasis plc, the provider of interactive healthcare and associated services, is pleased to announce the launch of Beating the Blues Connect. Beating the Blues Connect will combine on-line therapy with 24/7 telephonic support, to meet the growing demand from private patients for confidential and immediate access to treatment for mild and moderate depression and anxiety related problems. The initial price of Beating the Blues Connect, which includes 16 weeks telephonic support and one year's access to Beating the Blues will be 325.00.




An estimated six million people suffer from anxiety and depression in the UK and evidence indicates that in excess of 25% of people with mental health problems do not go to their GP or the NHS for support, often to preserve confidentiality. In response, Ultrasis is making its flagship Beating the Blues programme available for private use.




Beating the Blues Connect will be delivered by LTL Connect which will provide the service through its dedicated 24 hour call centre in Cardiff. LTL Connect is renowned for delivering wellbeing services on behalf of the Teacher Support Network to over 800,000 Teachers and Educational Staff in the UK and for its involvement in the Welsh 'Healthy Minds at Work' programme.



Nigel Brabbins, Ultrasis' Chief Executive, said:




'Since the National Institute for Health and Clinical Excellence recommended Beating the Blues for use across the NHS there has been a rising tide of demand from private patients. It's widely known that many people don't want to go to traditional services to receive support, many choosing to pay a reasonable price for convenience, ease of access and confidentiality. Beating the Blues Connect will meet this demand, providing a high quality, evidence based way of helping people to recover their emotional well-being. The price for this cutting edge product is highly competitive.'




He added: 'The partnership we have developed with LTL Connect to deliver this retail version will also enable us to look at opportunities to deliver bespoke packages into the workplace, enabling employers to address mental health issues as part of their duty of care.




'The launch of Beating the Blues Connect, as heralded in the recent interim statement, creates another opportunity to extend sales activity beyond the NHS, where Ultrasis continues to experience high renewal rates, sustained income growth and increased market penetration.'







Confidentholder - 04 Jun 2008 08:34 - 1283 of 1525

If we can get a national sign-up for the NHS then we will really jump. Then any sign-up with anyone in America will take the sp to another level.

WOODIE - 05 Jun 2008 07:23 - 1284 of 1525

from todays sun.
By JANE SYMONS

Published: Today

A NEW computer program is offering hope to people suffering from depression.

But broken Government promises mean that thousands of patients are being denied the revolutionary treatment.

The Beating The Blues system teaches positive thinking techniques to change the way that patients see themselves and their problems.

This form of therapy is called Cognitive Behaviour (CBT) and it has proved to be effective in dealing with mild to moderate depression.


Advertisement

In 2006, the National Institute for Clinical Excellence (NICE) ruled that CBT, by computer, was great value for money and should be on the NHS.

The watchdog gave primary care trusts 90 days to act on this.

But it was more than a year before then Health Secretary Patricia Hewitt, in May 2007, announced that it should be made available nationwide immediately.


Delays

And another year on, it is still only available in 59 out of 149 PCTs.

The delays are adding millions of pounds to the NHS drugs budget for prescription antidepressants.

Former nurse and NHS boss John Smith is executive director of Ultrasis, the firm behind Beating The Blues. He says: Its a travesty.

NICE said introducing it would have a cost benefit of 128million a year.

Face-to-face therapy costs 750 to 1,500 for each patient. We are offering something that runs to 30 to 50 per treatment.

But Health Secretary Alan Johnson insists it is the responsibility of PCTs to ensure it is delivered.

He adds that the ruling Strategic Health Authorities have the final say but if patients are dissatisfied, they can use the established NHS complaints procedure.



See beatingtheblues.co.uk

WOODIE - 13 Jun 2008 09:01 - 1285 of 1525

Latest news provided by the News Distribution Services.
Please use the search to locate specific information.
back to list


Thursday 12 June 2008 14:52
Department of Health (National)

32 PCTs to spearhead surge in talking therapies


Health minister Ivan Lewis today announced the 32 sites who will begin to roll out talking therapies around the country.

Each of the 32 Primary Care Trusts (PCTs) will receive a share of the 33 million first instalment of new money announced for the purpose by Health Secretary Alan Johnson on World Mental Health Day last year (10 October).

The funds will help the NHS create a new workforce that can offer properly supervised low intensity and high intensity therapy, slashing waiting times for this kind of treatment and helping patients achieve a level of recovery that they can clearly see and which is in line with the evidence from clinical trials that has been independently reviewed by the national Institute for health and Clinical Excellence (NICE).

Care Services Minister Ivan Lewis said:

"This initiative will transform the way the NHS helps people with depression and anxiety disorders. It will help to reduce the stigma associated with mental health problems. I believe it is one of the most important advances for NHS services in a generation."

Over the next three years, 3,600 extra therapists will be trained and offer treatment to 900,000 people. In the first year, at least 700 therapists will be trained and see around 100,000 people.

Training places are expected to become available through the NHS Jobs website http://www.jobs.nhs.uk from late June.

Notes to editors

1. The country's 10 strategic health authorities have each chosen between two and five Primary Care Trusts to take this forward and a number of higher education institutions to deliver the newly developed national curricula for high- and low-intensity therapy workers from the autumn.

More PCTs will join the Improving Access to Psychological Therapies programme as further money comes on stream in the next two years - a total of 103 million in 2009-10 and rising to 173 million in 2010-11.

The programme began in 2006, with two pilot projects in Newham, East London, and Doncaster, in Yorkshire, focused on working-age adults. Between them, they saw 5,000 patients in a year and brought well over half of them to measurable recovery with the number going to work rising by 10 per cent.

In 2007, 11 PCTs began exploring the specific needs of one or more vulnerable groups including children and young people, new mothers, older people, black and ethnic minorities, offenders and people with long term conditions or medically unexplained symptoms.

2. The successful PCTs chosen to take part in the first year are:

NHS North West
Eastern and Central Cheshire
Western Cheshire
Knowsley
Salford
East Lancashire

NHS South West
Bournemouth and Poole
Cornwall and the isles of Scilly
Dorset
Swindon

NHS East of England
Bedfordshire
Cambridgeshire
West Hertfordshire

NHS Yorks and Humber
North Lincolnshire
Leeds
East Riding
Sheffield

NHS East Midlands
Nottingham City
Lincolnshire

NHS London
Camden
City and Hackney
Ealing

NHS West Midlands
Dudley
Shropshire
Stoke

NHS South East Coast
East Sussex Downs and Weald
Hastings and Rother
Brighton and Hove City
West Kent (locality)

NHS South Central
Buckinghamshire (locality)
Berkshire West (locality)

NHS North East
South Tyneside
North Tyneside




[ENDS]

cynic - 13 Jun 2008 21:13 - 1286 of 1525

i am afraid the share performance pattern has been repeated several times by ULT ..... it rockets briefly, to fizzle out and fall like the proverbial stick

gbrown100 - 16 Jun 2008 16:27 - 1287 of 1525

Indeed Cynic, and I kick myself every time it falls down again wishing I had cut my losses lol.

cynic - 17 Jun 2008 09:24 - 1288 of 1525

much as the concept might be fine and even recommended by/to NHS, it is patently obvious that NHS is strapped for cash - primarily through paying hordes of waste-of-space administrators far too much for little benefit to anyone

Confidentholder - 17 Jun 2008 11:55 - 1289 of 1525

The problem is that the NHS doesn't even realise that by signing up to BtB they will save a fortune in drugs wghich they currently issue willy-nilly and which are having no effect in a lot of cases or are not even required.

cynic - 17 Jun 2008 12:15 - 1290 of 1525

never that simple with gov't run so-called oraganisations

Confidentholder - 18 Jun 2008 08:26 - 1291 of 1525

I can't see this fall being arrested unl;ess some stonking news comes out, but I am not willing to sell as it will turn 10 minutes after I do so.

cynic - 18 Jun 2008 09:49 - 1292 of 1525

conversely, when will you overcome greed and take a profit if you don't have the balls to cut a loss?

WOODIE - 23 Jun 2008 07:03 - 1293 of 1525

RNS Number : 2015X
Ultrasis PLC
23 June 2008

Press release
23 June 2008





Ultrasis plc




'Beating the Blues' is to be translated for use in Dutch and Belgian healthcare markets, demonstrating the therapy's cross-border potential







Ultrasis plc, the provider of interactive healthcare and associated services, is pleased to announce that it has agreed a contract with Innohealth BV for its flagship product, Beating the Blues, for the treatment of anxiety and depression, to be translated into Dutch. Under the contract Innohealth BV has exclusive rights to market Beating the Blues in the Dutch language in Holland and Belgium.. Innohealth will be responsible for providing a complete re-filming of the video components as well as a translation of the text and voice into Dutch. Innohealth will pay Ultrasis exclusivity and royalty fees.




Nigel Brabbins, Ultrasis' Chief Executive, said: 'This is a significant breakthrough for Ultrasis as it signals a wider acceptance of the economic and clinical value of Beating the Blues in non-English speaking markets. It is especially important given that the Dutch healthcare system has recently moved from a public funding model to a health insurance model, paid for by the individual, where patient choice and value for money will be key. The contract we have agreed with Innohealth BV secures both a proven route to market once the Dutch conversion is complete and guarantees income flow from exclusivity payments and royalty fees.




'The value of Cognitive Behavioural Therapy in the treatment of depression and anxiety is widely recognised. Translation of the existing Beating the Blues programme into other languages should now lead to opportunities for Ultrasis across Europe and beyond, providing other countries with a ready-made solution to their mental health needs.'




Arjan van der Weijde, Innohealth Chief Executive said: 'Innohealth.BV has been established to meet the growing need for cost effective and evidence based solutions in the Dutch healthcare market. The availability of Beating the Blues as a treatment option for depression and anxiety will provide additional choice and value for the patient and support practitioners to provide increased value for money services. We fully expect Beating the Blues to deliver the same excellent clinical outcomes in Holland and Belgium as those achieved in the UK and are delighted to have agreed a contract with Ultrasis for exclusivity in the Dutch language in both these Countries.'




- ends -




Confidentholder - 01 Jul 2008 08:05 - 1294 of 1525

Good news that a PR firm has been appointed. It means that they are going to have lots of news which is very positive.

Confidentholder - 02 Jul 2008 14:02 - 1295 of 1525

It doesn't matter what news comes out on this at the moment, we are going down. I am not selling regardless of where it goes as the company has the right products and simply needs to market them better.

halifax - 02 Jul 2008 14:09 - 1296 of 1525

With their overheads they need a massive increase in sales.
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