custard
Established Member
Just for the record, as many on this thread don't seem to know how GP's operate:
Interesting post Eric, I learnt a lot there.
Just for the record, as many on this thread don't seem to know how GP's operate:
RobinBHM":2v29upfv said:I understand that the NHS is struggling and I understand the viewpoint that introducing charges is likely to impact on people with less money.
I get all that but, I do think there is a real binge drinking culture in this country that on every Friday and Saturday night A&E staff end being the ones faced with having to deal with the result of that culture, by way of abuse, assault and important resources stretched.
I also think that like anything 'free', the NHS is abused and too many people will book a doctors appointment without making any attempt to sort out the problem themselves. If people had to pay for an appointment, I wonder how many people would then think twice before going......
Back problems, torn muscles and similar injuries can often be dealt with very effectively privately. Ive had discussions about with people and Ive often had the response, £50 for an appointment, Ill go to the doctor first and see. So what is doctor going to do about a typical lower back pain caused by a torn muscle? Ibuprofen or referral would be the answer.
I forget how many young people Ive known have suffered 'anxiety'. Is life that more stressful these days.......
Multiply what that one instance cost by millions and it does.Jacob":3ponknyf said:phil.p":3ponknyf said:" ... .... The cost to the system is ridiculous, let alone the inconvenience and discomfort. Communication and the NHS shouldn't be mentioned in the same sentence.
Little details of failures like yours can be annoying but in the bigger scheme of things don't necessarily amount to much.
AJB Temple":12jp8w0d said:The anxiety post is an interesting one. My business recruits probably ten people each year: part growth and part replacement. In the past few years we have seen several new recruits (usually graduates) take time off for anxiety. Eventually, when we get to the bottom of this, there is some history that has not been disclosed. We recently recruited a young woman of 21. She joined in December. We have not seen her yet since the new year as she has been signed off work by her doctor with anxiety.
Experience of this kind of thing as an employer eventually hardens you as there are without doubt some people who take advantage of the system. Hence, I will probably instruct HR to dismiss her next week. Whilst I agree that mental health is important, I do think some of the youngsters of today could do with a bit more backbone and resilience.
That one's actually not an NHS thing though phil, there's not a hospital in the world that has solid working electronic data exchange even amongst its own departments, let alone with any other external unit. It's a rather large market and R&D area in software engineering (which is my day job). Couple of years back, I was working on a training tool for nurses; one of the problems the nursing school had was training nurses to doublecheck records because you couldn't depend on a transferred record being correct. I thought this was silly and then after my brother broke his leg rather badly, found that they got his name wrong on every single outpatient visit - they'd take his name at reception and send it up to orthopaedics, who consistently had it wrong by the time he got there.phil.p":3t5khr41 said:" ... simple things like electronic data exchange with local hospitals, is primitive and erratic."
Or non existent. I was asked to visit the surgery for a blood test for lipids and a blood pressure check. I said I had just come out of hospital where I had had 156 blood pressure checks, daily blood tests and major vein and artery surgery and that if there was anything remotely suspect it would have been dealt with. Ah, yes ... but we have no record of that, came the reply. So I have to waste my time (and my wife's working time) and go for another blood test to keep them happy - which will entail another three or four stabbings as they attempt to find a usable vein. The cost to the system is ridiculous, let alone the inconvenience and discomfort. Communication and the NHS shouldn't be mentioned in the same sentence.
Aye, and then there's one of our local hospitals here who had to hire a warehouse to take its misplaced files, because it was filing things, not by patient record, but in date order. They lost around fifteen years of my x-rays (I have a progressive disease, so these, though old, were important). My consultant asked questions, which the administration wouldn't respond to, and his request for a formal apology to me elicited nothing either. That was relatively recent.MarkDennehy":38sbrzzt said:[snipped purely for brevity]... There's not a hospital in the world that has solid working electronic data exchange even amongst its own departments, let alone with any other external unit. It's a rather large market and R&D area in software engineering (which is my day job). Couple of years back, I was working on a training tool for nurses; one of the problems the nursing school had was training nurses to doublecheck records because you couldn't depend on a transferred record being correct. I thought this was silly and then after my brother broke his leg rather badly, found that they got his name wrong on every single outpatient visit - they'd take his name at reception and send it up to orthopaedics, who consistently had it wrong by the time he got there...
Jacob":6p374fhi said:https://data.oecd.org/healtheqt/hospital-beds.htm
AJB Temple":3l7c5ulg said:she has been signed off work by her doctor with anxiety.
...
I will probably instruct HR to dismiss her next week. Whilst I agree that mental health is important, I do think some of the youngsters of today could do with a bit more backbone and resilience.
NHS was regarded as something of a miracle in days of yore - that it could function with so little management.phil.p":xrpiem6y said:Some years ago the NZ economy took a dive and there was serious job pruning. There was at the time a waiting list of something like nine months for a driving test, and the NZ government decided the Dept of Transport needed sorting out - an ideal opportunity. They employed a senior management guy from Honda (no, I don't know why, either) who abolished whole tiers of management - they had tiers whose sole purpose was to manage another tier - and within a few few months had the waiting list down to six weeks.
RobinBHM":3sze93as said:I understand that many hospitals struggle to balance their books because of massive debt caused by the private finance initiative. A scheme created by Tory government and expanded greatly by the Blair government.
I am sure that the NHS is underfunded, but Im not sure more money will help or that there are enough funds available. Its always easy for opposition governments to argue about terrible austerity measures, cuts in services etc, but overspending over many years increases debt that causes problems for future generations.
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