I think there could be less of a problem , not totaly as every system has faults .
from 2010 to 2014 I was involved and ran several large construction projects on several hospitals . one being my local . The more I did the more I saw money literaly being peed down the drain . I wont mention the hospital as it could get complicated but . We were there to install a "facility" that would carry out services normaly subbed out . It was a 1.5m project and was designed to not only deal with their own needs but to also provide the same service for other local trusts . The facility was functional and where it was located 90% of people would never notice it . On the outside they were determined to have multi coloured panels 3 foot square at a cost of £400.00 each , around 20 of them . the list was endless of the special requests of managers for fittings and not functional design elements that serves no purpose . The more I was involved the more I was pricing and seeing the waste . After hearing from some one I got to know , it has made very little £ difference to the hospitals budget . The money that was wasted , would of paid for several nurses for quiet some time .
As for bed blocking , I was unfortunately in hospital around 12 years ago I was admitted on the wednesday , the doctors would make an am and pm visit . On the friday when I was due to be discharged a temp doc came round and declared he wasnt prepared to send me home as he was just taking home and that I would have to wait until monday . I felt fine and wanted to go home . Needless to say I discharged myself within an hour . I could of stayed but when a bed costs around £1000 a day , why waste it , and no doubt someone else was more in need of it . If a doctor or doctors were stationed to wards permanently maybe people could be sent home when needed , not when their shifts dictated . i am not talking about the middle of the night , there is 8 to 12 working hours in a day and people dont come into the hospital only between 9 and 5 .
There is alot things to be looked at , but it is not the frontline staff's fault , it is the holders of the purse strings . I can vouch for that as my partner is a student nurse ( 3rd year ) and she has already made it clear she will never work on a ward in a main hospitals as when she has been on shift , they work like trojan horses ,to make up for the lack of staff . As a second year student she was on a day shift and was given 18 people , two wards who were her responsibilty . that is not only bad but moraly wrong .
ta ta