Dispatches - NHS in Crisis

Author
Discussion

Pitre

Original Poster:

4,999 posts

241 months

Monday 24th June
quotequote all
Bloody hell, this is an absolute disgrace.

Why they don't spend an hour afterwards grilling the relevant minister to ask how they sleep at night?

Kerniki

2,478 posts

28 months

Monday 24th June
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But of course, britain isnt broken.. beggars belief frown

Tenacious

220 posts

6 months

Monday 24th June
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They sleep very well just like the past ministers. Been going on for years and years, nothing new here.

Pitre

Original Poster:

4,999 posts

241 months

Monday 24th June
quotequote all
Victoria Atkins - what the fk are you doing to sort this out?

National insurance cuts are NOT the answer. More hospitals are needed. More money, spent more effectively.

This is a national disgrace.

740EVTORQUES

980 posts

8 months

Monday 24th June
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I’ve been an NHS Consultant for 24 years, never seen the NHS so utterly broken. It’s shocking even to someone on the inside.

epom

12,427 posts

168 months

Monday 24th June
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It comes down to accountability, the days of there being any are long gone. Our crew are currently building a hospital that is expected to cost €2.4billion once finished. Yes Billion.

Pitre

Original Poster:

4,999 posts

241 months

Monday 24th June
quotequote all
Britain is rapidly becoming a third world country. I hope the outgoing government are proud of that achievement.

740EVTORQUES

980 posts

8 months

Monday 24th June
quotequote all
It feels like we’ve been boiling the frog for around 10 years not realising how thing has been gradually slipping till it reached crisis point (ie it started WAY before COVID, junior drs strikes etc.)

I rarely go to A&E but when I did recently it was horrific, people layers deep on trolleys in corridors etc, some very seriously ill.

Castrol for a knave

5,300 posts

98 months

Tuesday 25th June
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And the plot twist is....

They are closing the A&E at Telford, and relocating it into Shrewsbury.

Both are so overwhelmed at present that the ambos are using Walsall


Louis Balfour

27,695 posts

229 months

Tuesday 25th June
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I didn't watch the programme.

But I was talking to an Italian friend yesterday, who was telling me how broken health in Italy is. Apparently she had to wait from July till December to see a consultant at Servizio Sanitario Nazionale .

Yesterday morning, I received an NHS consultation date which will be a full two years after I was referred.

I was explaining to her how the world thinks that the NHS is something that it is not.


S600BSB

6,120 posts

113 months

Tuesday 25th June
quotequote all
Pitre said:
Victoria Atkins - what the fk are you doing to sort this out?

National insurance cuts are NOT the answer. More hospitals are needed. More money, spent more effectively.

This is a national disgrace.
Agree

FrankAbagnale

1,730 posts

119 months

Tuesday 25th June
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My partner has worked in the NHS for 16 years and this is by far the most demoralised she/her service has ever been and they’re completely exhausted.

The resources they have are reducing, the staff levels are reducing, the demands are increasing and the number of services they offer are going up.

Waiting lists to see her/team are well over a year and can be up to two years in some cases.

I’d imagine she’ll leave within the next 12-24 months which would be a big loss for the NHS.

To a simpleton (moi), it feels like resource has gone down a bit, but the main impact has been demand for the service going through the roof. The NHS is used by too many, for too much.

Vasco

17,369 posts

112 months

Tuesday 25th June
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Isn't the problem just the sheer size of the NHS operation.

By coincidence, yesterday I had to go to a major local hospital A+E for various tests. About 100+ patients were waiting for apx 3 hours (better than usual apparently), despite the fact that the staff were clearly working their socks off.

I then had to go to another section where 6-8 staff were generally milling around their Reception area. They were certainly readily available to meet any urgent demand but an average of, say, 6 staff doing very little got a bit tiresome after another 3 hours.

The whole organisation needs a massive overhaul and reorganisation - which simply won't happen.

It's just so ridiculously vast. Where would you start?

blue_haddock

3,871 posts

74 months

Tuesday 25th June
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I'm local and due to my aged parents being quite infirm have spent a considerable amount of time in Telford and Shrewsburys A&E departments.

Both are absolutely on the edge and are ready to implode and yet the Telford A&E is going to be downgraded to an urgent care centre and all the ambulances going to Shrewsbury which cant cope as it is.

Absolutely ridiculous situation.

P-Jay

10,801 posts

198 months

Tuesday 25th June
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Oh it's fked.

Wife is an NHS Nurse, however bad you think it is, it's worse. There is a 6-8 week waiting list to get to one of her clinics, that's people usually elderly or very ill with terrible and complex wounds that aren't healing. A few appointments a week with be 'DNA' (did not attend) sometimes because they've healed, sometimes because it got worse, and they ended up in Hospital and often because they've died.

Personally, I was given a referral for an urgent appointment last September, I finally got an appointment last week, it was an hour-long appointment, which are rare, in that time we managed about half of the background stuff they need to do, so I've got to go back, they gave me the very first slot available, it's in 6 weeks. Guess what the average waiting time is for a non-urgent appointment? 5 to 7 years...

740EVTORQUES

980 posts

8 months

Tuesday 25th June
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I started as a junior doc in 1995, consultant in 2002, still working full time.

When I was training people waited more than a year for surgery and not infrequently died on the waiting list. It then improved and the waiting lists almost disappeared under New Labour

Over the past 15 years it has gradually deteriorated. We routinely send people home who previously would be kept in hospital for urgent surgery, instead to wait on a waiting list. I can perform less than 1/2 the operations I did per year compared to 20 years ago simply due to a lack of staff and resources. Management overreach is rampant.

It’s dire, hard to see how the NHS can flourish under a Conservative Government. They’ve had more than enough time to try to prove they are competent and we can see the results..

asfault

12,775 posts

186 months

Tuesday 25th June
quotequote all
revolving door of Minister for xxxxx is part of the problem, they last a year then move onto another job.

740EVTORQUES

980 posts

8 months

Tuesday 25th June
quotequote all
There’s also a real sense of managers measuring what they can measure not what they should measure.

Example surgeons were told that finished cases early was inefficient as that was not using all the theatre time while colleagues that were slower were using the resources efficiently.

There are lots of Alice in Wonderland style examples of poor management and perverse incentives.

leef44

4,769 posts

160 months

Tuesday 25th June
quotequote all
Vasco said:
Isn't the problem just the sheer size of the NHS operation.

By coincidence, yesterday I had to go to a major local hospital A+E for various tests. About 100+ patients were waiting for apx 3 hours (better than usual apparently), despite the fact that the staff were clearly working their socks off.

I then had to go to another section where 6-8 staff were generally milling around their Reception area. They were certainly readily available to meet any urgent demand but an average of, say, 6 staff doing very little got a bit tiresome after another 3 hours.

The whole organisation needs a massive overhaul and reorganisation - which simply won't happen.

It's just so ridiculously vast. Where would you start?
And it is growing. Every time someone comes across another gap in society where an illness/sickness/condition has not been catered for then it hits tabloid headlines. Politicians want to score points by being the one who allocated billions implementing another division/department.

At the same time, there are no additional staff and this is to be absorbed into the current overstretched workload.

Hang on a minute, didn't I say billions are allocated? Yes, where does that money go because it is not in additional staffing.

It's so oversized and creaking so inefficiently while being economically unsustainable.

lizardbrain

2,475 posts

44 months

Tuesday 25th June
quotequote all
I think we should give labour a 15 year term