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ian
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NHS

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Is the NHS ( free and accessible health care delivered irrespective of status throughout  your and your loved ones entire mortal life, regardless  of status and money and not for profit) the single most important factor in your life as a citizen?

 

 



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It has been mine for the past 30 years and more.

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One of the greatest achievements that Britain has ever achieved, should be a source of great pride.

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Yes, but not at any cost.

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It costs what it costs. We pay for plenty of pointless wars and bail out greedy banks, NHS is chicken feed in comparison. Look abroad to northern Europe who have great healthcare, they pay higher taxes. You get what you pay for .

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sickly child wrote:

It costs what it costs. We pay for plenty of pointless wars and bail out greedy banks, NHS is chicken feed in comparison. Look abroad to northern Europe who have great healthcare, they pay higher taxes. You get what you pay for .


 Well said m8 

 

If the NHS isnt the most important factor then its certainly one of the first things I think about when its time to vote.



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I believe that I know the NHS inside out and a bit more.

The one that most talk about exists in fantasy land promoted with the 'best in the world phrase'

Best in the world my ar..se...Why then is it that we come low down in just about every European league table that measures health outcomes?..usually on a par with Estonia!

Standards of basic care in our hospitals has deteriorated...hospitals not following basic hygiene and cleanliness procedures, nurses 'too posh to wash'

Go on any ward and see patients unattended in their time of need, call bells unanswered, meal plates put down and removed uneaten for patients too ill to eat without help, beds without consultant names above them, nursing staff who cannot be identified by rank or qualifications..same applies to the non white coated doctor, difficult to spot.

Try and discuss your medical condition and treatment and that of a relative to see how difficult it is.

See how many times you are told 'your father is not actually my patient' so I dont know' or similar when approaching a ward nurse.

Perhaps worst of all poor outcomes for just about all the major illnesses compared to Europe.

lets look at Primary Care..your GP and others

GPs who earn over 100K, many towards the 150K per year...many of those now work a four day week and without out of hours.

I bet you have not worked out how little of a working week your GP spends in face to face consultations...try it...you will be surprised!

Tick box medicine with high rewarding often ridiculous targets has changed General Practice dramatically.

Doctors in General Practice now spend their time planning how to cherry pick and achieve the most financially rewarding targets at the expense of other heath care needs...In short we now have a breed of get rich quick doctors who have never worked past 6pm in a primary care setting and of course never on a Sunday...oh!..not on a Saturday either!!

Now we have promises that cannot be delivered ..7 days a week Primary Care...impossible! in the present set up...It shows how little the politicians understand about how it actually works....Same with promising 7 days hospital care without an impossible amount of money and reorganisation...again complete lack of understanding of the set up.

Lets just promise it, especially a week or two before an election..can we do it?..no way!...If anyone asks blame the economy or coalition partner but keep promising!

I wont even discuss the care of the elderly and dementia sufferers which is nothing short of disgusting..maybe on another thread.

Of course with the above outline, I have made some generalisations and there are some fantastic people working in our health service from doctor to cleaner but the system makes it impossible for them to deliver the great service we talk about but do not deliver..we talk the talk but certainly dont walk the walk.

Can it be fixed?...........Maybe another thread but it wont be fixed by plucking things out of the sky like 24 hour appointments for over 75.....why exactly?..at what consequence?...why not 73?...I mean who thinks up these things.

A midwife for every mum!...what does that mean?...how will it be achieved?....Any midwife will answer the last question for you....It wont!

The NHS has achieved some great things under difficult cir***stances but 'best in the world?'.....I should coco!



-- Edited by Kempo on Sunday 12th of April 2015 08:39:51 AM

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Having myself worked in the NHS for many years I do not necessarily disagree with you Kempo, though I find your analysis a little on the bleak side. Problems that I have seen is to do with the culture of the management that exist in modern health care systems. The notion of patients as consumers and care as a commodity is a real problem. The adoption of such philosophies as lean thinking based on the Toyota car manufacturing has seen patients become little more that numbers. However front line workers are on the whole motivated and caring, would we prefer an American system? I wouldn't. No doubts standards have dropped, though is this more to do with front line staff having more and more paper work and form filling and less time to care. Time and time we are told that their is only so much money etc, wonder what we could have done with all that we spent on the Iraq and Afghan wars?

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ian
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I agree that the issue Is culture and that culture is materialism. The philosophy that has taken over in hospitals is an extension of the square mile. Corporate thinking and behaviour equals demoralised staff.
T
When nurses and doctors are motivated it is due to legitimate professional Control over their philosophy of care. The government and society prefer automatic regulation above the skill and philosophy of medicine and care.

 

In the 80's there was a growing recognition of the need for skill and holistic philosophies, but they were drowned by targets, payment by results and IT systems that corralled professionals and made them the *****es of a managerial system  - non sympathetic, non aligned, autocratic and punishnent/blame culture - that has drawn the blood from the marrow of every inspired moment. 

 

What we have now is a closed shop of fear and indifference driven by greed and status and too many careerists that have no heart for care.

 

It is a shameful buisness at times. Too many good people have been silenced by the system and it continues to this day.



-- Edited by ian on Sunday 12th of April 2015 10:10:36 AM

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Health care is not a system or a commodity.

It is art and science.

Let the artists and scientists free and sack and cull 90% of managers - believe me, they are absolutely not needed.

The shame of all this politically is that there is nothing to choose between the parties.

Under a labour government there is better treatment of staff but multilayers of management and under the tories there is appalling treatment of staff and now unfortunately the same multilayers and autocratic approach H but for profit to a wider consumer.

It use to be you could trust the tories to demolish the waste of money on pernicious bureaucracy but not anymore. 

 

 



-- Edited by ian on Sunday 12th of April 2015 10:20:05 AM

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I am by my nature a cynic and a pessimist sickly but it does seem that we agree on the deteriorating standards and that's from two people who have worked within the system for a good few years.

It's only the degree of the failings that we seem to differ which is a great shame.

The major benefit over say the USA is that it is available to all and free at point of delivery.
Maybe because of this we have to accept poorer quality...if this is so then we should be told and not conned.

I agree fully with your point re business management style not working yet it's something the Torys in particular will commit to for ever.

The NHS doesn't sell cornflakes so don't manage it as if it does.

It gives stuff away and maybe therein lies the basic problem maybe not..it's difficult to say the least.

Changes can be made although some would be unpalatable to the public.

I would scrap the GP set up which favours only GPs and a dying breed of older patients who insist on their personal doctor...It doesn't work in modern times and is too costly.

We need primary care centres in each town and then costs will drop dramatically although obviously upfront money to finance the change would be needed and would be significant.

GPs would revolt as would the public but brave decisions are needed.

Management costs, building costs and running costs would die decimated.
From a Primary Care Centre a seven day a week service could be delivered, I have no doubts and the costs would be less than in the present system.

If you want to choose your doctor then get your wallet out but if you want the NHS to treat you then you have to give up the personal family doctor nonsense....it's a nice want but we cannot afford to provide it...that's the reality.

I am poacher turned gamekeeper...the present Primary Care system benefits mainly the carers not the cared for.

 



-- Edited by Kempo on Sunday 12th of April 2015 10:22:17 AM

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Agree with your posts also Ian.

See..we are all agreed.....but for years we have all stayed quiet and most still do...good men and women doing and saying nothing!

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Having seen the very top of care, I can say 'physically' wow - when my wife was at deaths door, if they hadn't been so good & fast acting she wouldn't be as good as what she is today. I was that moved by the dedication of those people in intensive care (and obviously her neuro surgeon who was called out of bed at an ungodly hour) that 12 months after I actually didn't mind sitting in A&E for 3 hours to have my rolled ankle seen to. However despite all this, when it came to seeing someone to look after the mental aspect of her recovery, i.e. best practise & advice in bringing her round to reality from her injured head / morphine induced reset she was in - nobody. In fact it was to the point of appalling.

To your post Kempo, I would agree its a mess, resources wasted by a labour government hell bent on producing management, and management to watch the managers, people who spend all day justifying that their job is needed in a hospital when they don't ever make anyone feel better!

I think the shortage of nurses & doctors etc is purely down to the environment they have to work in. You would have to be one special individual to work in the pressure cooker of an A&E, its not an attractive job to have purely down to the working conditions. Get it so its an attractive proposition and our country can produce enough of its own without foreign intervention

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In their election blarb, the Labour Party vowed that the NHS is safer in their hands than under the tories, also they vowed to end the backdoor privatisation of NHS services yet it was Blairs government that STARTED privatisation in the NHS, (PFI) & even worse than that, introduced the evil that is NHS Foundation Trusts, a system that works by the govt giving each "trust" a pot of money every April to spend how they wish, completely unregulated by anyone. Thats why you see so many "suits full of **** all" in NHS Hospitals, where even the hospital cat has got a secretary & an assistant.
I would consider voting for any party that would seriously end NHS Foundation Trusts!!!!!

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I lecture in simulation to nurses and paramedics and a lot of this covers patient safety and clinical risk. The modern health system in the western world is not focussed on either of these things, it is focussed on producion,to move as fast as possible with as little cost as possible. Production pressure leads to errors, people are asked to work faster with a more a complex workload will inevitably stuff up. We are not making cars we are treating individuals individual needs, one size does not fit all. To top it off there is a culture of bulllying within the management system and reluctance to address issues of risk and safety. As they say they bury thier mistakes.
I agree with Kempo about the need for primary care centers which will be more efficient and effective. Most importantly is a change in atitude from governments and managers, we need to own our failings and they need to be transparant and not hidden. putting the individual and their needs first.
OK rant over. :)

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My views.

I personally have had first class experiences. Faultless and professional for 2 major operations and the follow up physio.

My wife was in and out of hospital for about 6 years and we experienced both ends of the spectrum. From the Angel in the admissions ward to the fat idle ***** who thought her clients were a burden.

We met some wonderful professionals who cared deeply and I threatened a ward manager who took a sadistic pleasure in watching pain and inflicting pain. If he continued with his actions ii would have gone higher.

The main problem I see is that there is so much red tape that it absorbs so much time that staff spend their time pushing pens and not trolleys.

There are too many managers and too many managers of managers. Targets are designed to make poor performance look good and are a waste of time.

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I've never had but first class service from the nhs. Was very ill 10 years ago and had to spend six months in and out of hospital. On the other hand my wifes friend was made redundant from the hospital recieved over 20k then got set on three weeks later in the next office. This happened to all five in the office. Two didn't return. Now I see where the money goes. Good and bad.

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The enemies of the NHS (profiteers ) will always lie about cost and service quality to get more money from the public coffers.

The issue is keeping the whole of the NHS under public control and reversing the tide of privatisation. That's why as a nation we must resist and get 'smart' about the long term issues. The privileged few want to create fear and spread misinformation, which of course has already been effective in the shape of insurance, private health care and the sell off of hospital treatment: nurses, equipment, doctors, beds..., as elequently stated above about the corruption of values and standards via PFI, hospital trusts and managerial takeover, we (the electorate ) need to radicalise our vote and action  wherever possible to support the principles of universal healthcare and support for the sick and infirm.




-- Edited by ian on Tuesday 14th of April 2015 07:02:27 AM

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I see the GPs' trade union have now produced a survey showing how hard done by they feel!

They ought to try some of their patients' jobs!.

General Practice does indeed have a number of stresses but so do many jobs....the truth is GPs are highly paid 100K plus, have as many weeks holiday as they choose[yes its true before anyone questions this fact], fantastic pension, many do a four day week, no out of hours responsibility, no weekends.

The job is much easier now than in the past and much better paid.

Of course many GPs are thinking of early retirement as I did and thats because the pay has been so high for years and the pension is so good allowing them to retire early..something that most of you I guess would not be able to do even if you disliked the job.

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My view,

My wife suffers from Addisons Disease I wont go into detail as you most of you wont have heard of it.

Last year I had to rush her into A+E.

Most Senior Consultants will have heard of Addisons,some nurses claim to have heard about it and the Junior Doctor that attended to us obviously had not.

He barely checked her notes he totally ignored the emergency letter we were given by her Consultant.

When I told him he would need a Duple to get into her vein again he ignored me.

After many attempts he eventually realised he needed a Duple.

In the meantime my wife was drifting in and out of consciousness.

I`m not knocking the NHS as over the years they have been fantastic.

There seems to be low morale amongst the staff,understandable given the amount of pressure they are under but this one

incident left me seething.

My wife recovered and all is fine so far.

How to fix the NHS?   No idea if I`m honest.

 

 

 



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