More on personal NHS experiences from regular commenter
Wiggia.
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Little did I realise after my shortish piece on the current
state of the NHS that shortly afterwards I would become a victim of the best
and worst that the NHS has to offer. I don't want to dwell on my personal
problems within this story but a short resume of the events leading up to my
hospitalisation will be no shock to many who have had to go through similar
trauma, if that is not too strong a word for what transpired.
Dodging The Grim
Reaper
About six weeks ago I started to get a shortness of breath.
As an asthmatic this is not unusual at certain times of the year depending on
pollen and other agitators, but this soon went further and breathing after any
exercise as simple as walking created a problem. After about four weeks and my
wife telling me to make a doctor’s appointment it magically subsided and I put
it all down to a severe asthma effect, not an attack but very uncomfortable.
After a couple of weeks the symptoms returned and got
steadily worse, I was reluctant to contact the surgery as getting an
appointment like so many others is a nightmare, but the situation developed to
the point of no choice.
The initial call resulted in the usual nothing available for
three weeks despite my pushing the issue, so I struggled on in increasing
trouble, then phoned again, still no joy even when explaining in full what was
going on and believing an asthma attack was imminent, the best they could offer
was to turn up on Monday morning and try for an appointment that day. A rubbish
solution but needs must, the problem being it was Friday so a couple of days to
go.
In a worsening state I got up on Monday washed and started
to feel unwell sat on the edge of the bed struggling to breath and feeling
awful I then briefly passed out, my wife called the surgery, not the ambulance
as we should have not wanting to load the A&E up with another patient. The
locum diagnosed well, it was nothing to do with the asthma and got me into the
acute ward post with, and the end of all the tests, x-rays and a scan it
transpired I had large blood clots in both lungs and the arteries, without
admittance the consultant openly admitted any more delay and I could have
easily been dead.
A Lot To Be Thankful
For
All is now I hope going well and my hospital treatment and
the people involved at all levels were top class despite the pressures they are
under, so I have a lot to be thankful for. With that out of the way I can
relate the marked differences that are now the norm in the NHS. The old GP
surgery where you could walk in on the day or phone and turn up is almost
completely gone. Three to four weeks for an appointment is considered normal
and even in urgent situations unless you make a big fuss in person little is
different. It is a total failure at the first line of health defence and with
other factors puts ever more pressure on hospitals to take up the slack.
Overloaded GP
Surgeries
Even my old surgery that was excellent has fallen to the new
low level as my adjacent patient in the ward who uses it related. 1500 new
houses gone up there and no extra doctors, all the old ones retired or gone
elsewhere and evermore female doctors with families, working part time, a story
repeated throughout the country.
My current surgery has an extra two housing estates being
completed over the road from it and is still taking new patients despite no
increase in doctors to cope, so soon three week appointments will be four
weeks, or perhaps next year who knows any more. It would be easy to fill pages
with anecdotal stories like mine from almost everywhere and it has been done to
death, we are all aware of the shortcomings.
More Openness In
Hospitals
What I found different when in hospital on this occasion was
the attitude of staff at all levels to these problems. Not many years back
getting anyone to agree with an opinion about the NHS that was not
congratulatory was met with a blank, it could not be criticised. That from this
short stay is something that dramatically changed; staff at all levels were
prepared to talk about the problems in a constructive manner and roundly
condemned what was happening at GP surgeries.
From the moment I was put in the ambulance and an ECG was
instigated, the crew after asking what had happened openly told me to ignore my
GP surgery in cases like this and simply phone for an ambulance. They
themselves had surgeries where appointments could not be had in similar
circumstances. A senior nurse in charge of a hospital unit readily revealed she
had had enough of her surgery and was at that moment about to change, though
she admitted she was lucky that she had somewhere to change to and that the
change would not guarantee all would stay well in the future.
Everyone will have their own vision of how the NHS should
move forward, and reams could be filled with all the suggestions, but what did
emerge was a consensus from the small sample of professionals for change in
certain areas.
The NHS - A Very
Different Animal
As with all things in this consumer based society money is
at the heart of the problem, we spend less on health care in GDP than our
contemporaries, the NHS is a very different animal to that started in '47 and
expectations as to what it should provide have soared along with the bill to do
so. From what I gathered another level of funding in the form of insurance as
in France Australia and many other countries is inevitable, whatever form it
takes. But all governments have for the simple reason of votes to stay in power
put off ever doing anything meaningful in that area for fear of the backlash,
but they and us can't have it both ways. It needs the courage to instigate
change at the earliest opportunity in a new parliament so that the mud-slinging
and recriminations can be weathered and the change accepted by the public and
the vested interests can be held at bay,
PFI has been a disaster yet is still being used under the
guise of a new deal. When money is at an all time low in borrowing terms there
is no excuse for PFI simply to keep debt off government books. “Never again”,
should be the mantra there.
Despite "official" pronouncements that health
tourism is not a major drain on NHS resources it is none the less a bigger
drain than admitted. It is difficult to believe official figures when there is
a refusal to collect data on this at the coal face. The same goes for the non
contributors who arrive here knowing they will be treated without even being
asked for their details.
Again the government and the NHS themselves refuse to admit
the scale that this activity has on resources and how much extra money the
taxpayer is footing the bill. Going by figures released from countries not so
coy on releasing these statistics the figure no doubt is enormous, with illegal
migrants getting into the country at over 100k a year, all of whom can simply
walk into a hospital and get care for nothing whatever their problem.
This has to be a major drain on resources especially in
places like London. As someone said not long ago - "you can have unlimited
immigration but you can't have welfare" as it will become unsustainable. Those
who come here are fully aware of our NHS hierarchy’s opinion that all the world
should be accommodated at the taxpayer’s expense and will continue to arrive ad
infinitum, Whilst this attitude prevails, some drastic curtailing of moral
principles at other peoples expense is called for.
At a lower level the usage of the NHS for trivia should be
charged for. An example is the Friday Saturday night drunk fest. I was told
this activity has reached the stage where those to pissed to get home now phone
for an ambulance so that they can sleep it off in the comfort of a hospital
bed, and that this is not an isolated practice. This and other similar wastes
of public money should be charged for. Nowhere else can you get that sort of
treatment, it simply is not available. Insurance could of course cover such
activities, but opinion again is divided on whether or what insurance should
cover.
The question of imported staff is another area of a short
cut that is a Ponzi scheme, attracting nursing staff and doctors from third
world countries. It is not difficult as the money they can earn here far
outstrips what they could earn back home, yet many of these people trained here
to be able to go home and make a difference. Morally the bribing of them to
return here to fill vacancies we should be filling from our own people is not
only wrong but a cheapskate solution. The cutting of training funds is one of
the seriously stupid decisions made by any government and the recent
announcement of more funding in that area will not scratch the surface as a
solution to the shortfall.
Accountability, waste in the public arena is legend, other
people’s money, and the ability to waste it is an art form for some individuals
and organisations. I had a classic example shown to me during my visit. This it
must be remembered is in a hospital that because of PFI is losing money at the
rate of around 30 million a year. A new bar code portable scanner is being used
that simply doesn't work properly, the old laser scanner was I am told quick
efficient and always worked, but someone decided a new form of scanner was
needed. A trial under perfect conditions was run and hey presto £800,000 is
spent on something not needed and that doesn't work in a day to day environment.
Next ! is all you will hear about it.
The drugs bill is stratospheric. Seeing what is dished out
in hospital these days is mind blowing , yet despite never ending cases of the
NHS trusts being ripped off for millions nobody is ever held to account and the
same companies continue to supply. One cannot help but believe that as in
football management and council contracts brown envelopes are involved. Our
money once again fills the boots of the recipients.
A Lighter Side Of
Hospital
But enough of the doom and gloom, what I have written here
has been in various forms been written before with little effect, change will
come but will probably be a forced change. Hospital is a world in a ward, the
constant ebb and flow of humanity is and can be an eye opener, especially if
you have not had the "pleasure" of being interned lately.
I was at first put in the acute ward, most stay only up to
24hrs for assessment before being moved to a more specific ward but I was there
for two nights plus most of the next day so had a constant change of scenery. The
staff on this ward were noticeably different, the variety of health problems
and injuries etc attracts those who need more variety in their day to day work.
On the only full day I was there my companions consisted of
a young chef who had not eaten for four days after ingesting something in
Germany that made him vomit continuously, a thirty stone night club owner who
had become ill with the same problem as myself and was also a diabetic, a young
lad who was waiting for a liver transplant and was in the process of setting up
a private ambulance business!, an old neighbour of mine from my last house that
I never met who said very little but in the silence that occasionally broke out
in the night would loudly say FO in his sleep? and a man who told jokes but one
could never understand a word he said because of the awful rasping chest
condition he had. One just laughed anyway and nodded, he seemed happy with
that, bit like Dickens 'aged parent'.
Our main topic of conversation apart from the obvious what
are you here for was the food. For reasons I have not fathomed the food in the
acute ward was terrible compared with half decent in the rest of the hospital.
Dishes such as sausage and mash should be and were avoided, the sausages I
named Colditz sausages, ersatz is the German word that best describes them. 90%
sawdust, no sign that a pig had ever been involved in the making.
The next up was anything with vegetables, all were stewed to
an in inch of their life, and the petite carrots as my night club friend called
them were obviously the minute thinnings from a carrot harvest. This awful
vegetable pottage that it had almost become permeated with its smell everything
near. The apple pie I had as dessert was the first I have ever had that smelt
and tasted of broccoli. This was only surpassed by the rice pudding that was
best described by someone else as "interesting".
On duty on the full day and later whilst in the acute ward
was a wonderful Jamaican nursing assistant called Godfrey who got into the
swing of things straight, in these PC days it is not on to describe him as a
perfect stand in for Jack Benny’s butler but he was. The meal ordering followed
a Michelin star restaurant mode when he came around with the 'menu' with
requests for a half bottle of Chianti with the shepherd’s pie and 'can I see
the à la carte' becoming the norm. He also had a little admirer which we
cottoned onto, but all was taken with a laugh and good spirit.
Our very large night club owner had no night clothes as none
would fit so went to the bathroom in his designer underpants and a towel that
covered little. When half jokingly stopped by a nurse saying he couldn't go out
like that he replied he had no choice and was only going out to get a quote for
materials anyway, time flew in that ward and it was soon time to be moved after
my scan upstairs.
But not before the first of several good doppelgangers
appeared, the first being my consultant, an elegant in style Frenchman who was
a slightly younger version of Sir Ian McKellan, he even spoke like him. So at
11 in the evening I was moved upstairs to cheering from those left behind.
The ward I was moved to was for chest cases. Not a lot funny
in there at first as the patient beside me was not going anywhere but further
upstairs soon and his neighbour had the misfortune to contract asbestosis when
as an engineer pipe lagging was removed on a job he was working on years ago. No
one should have to suffer like that on a continuous basis. His relief in
hospital was marginal and he would be back soon and forever as the cure does
not exist.
On the opposite side were two patients with respiratory
problems whom I got to know quite well and the resident loony for whom no bed
could be found elsewhere, apart from standing at the bottom of the beds with
eyes like Jack Nicholson in the Shining and going walk about with his frame. He
was harmless though not so sure about the one we had barnstorming the acute
ward earlier. He burst through the closed doors in a surgical gown all beard
and mad eyes with half of a roll up hanging from his lips. After a couple of
circuits looking like he had escaped from the set of The Life of Brian he tried
to open the window at the far end, I presume looking for another exit. Cries
from my unsympathetic companions of ‘open the window’ (we were two floors up)
went unheeded and he was ushered away by several nurses handlers and security
men. Never a dull moment on that ward.
The forced visit finished with another couple of
doppelgangers. The male doctor who came round with the consultant was George
Chakiris. I fully expected a rendition of Everyone's Come To America to be burst
into at any moment, and a nurse who was the spitting image from all angles of
Suranne Jones the ex Coronation St actress, but the piece de resistance of the
visit was the Nigerian nurse who looked like a black roly poly and sang for a
large part of the time. I questioned her about her singing and she said she is
a member of the Pentecostal church and during a rare lull in proceedings gave
us a full of Don't Worry be Happy with
all the moves down the centre of the ward to much applause. She said she
believed in the power of prayer, who was I to argue otherwise? When she had
such an uplifting effect on all around her, perhaps, just perhaps that is the
answer.
What the hell is
going on at GP level?
That should have been it, but this morning I returned to the
hospital for a blood test. Whilst there the senior nurse phoned my surgery to
arrange the next tests to be done there. Having no hotline she had to wait as
everyone else does for the phone to be answered, an appalling waste of very
busy peoples’ time. Once through the receptionist had no idea what she was
talking about and said we are not equipped, for a single finger prick, she then
passed someone else to the phone who after being told what was required said
that I could not be accommodated. My nurse replied that she the answer
unacceptable, that it was appalling and she had never heard anything like it
before and would be complaining to the appropriate authority. A minute later
the appointment was made. What the hell is going on at GP level?
I don't believe this snapshot of my stay is anything out of
the ordinary. The fact it is now almost normal re GPs is more than worrying it
is scandalous that the first line of defence for peoples’ health is now almost
certainly killing people.
Miranda Hart
Just as an aside - when I went back to the hospital I saw
the senior nurse who is changing her doctor again as she is head of the
coagulation unit, lovely lady in the true sense. What I failed to mention was
that she was the spitting image of Miranda Hart. I can't help myself with
doubles they fascinate me and in so many cases the physical similarities
obviously have an effect on the voice which often follows in its similarity
with the original. Keeps me amused.
7 comments:
Laughing and crying throughout this, Wiggia. An excellent piece. I'm wishing you all the best for a full and speedy recovery.
I am sure that many others reading this posting have had their share of questionable experiences with GPs and the NHS. I lived in Bermuda for 30 years and medical care there was available through private insurance. I had very few needs most of the time that I was there but I did eventually suffer a couple of heart attacks. The local medicos immediately arranged for me to be flown to Baltimore for the necessary treatment. I went that night and was greeted at the other end by staff ready to deal with me. The trip was successful and I was soon back to work in Bermuda. My son-in-law (also in Bermuda) was seriously ill for several years and was flown to the States for treatment many times. The treatment was seemingly efficient but, sadly, did not save his life. The point about it all was that I and my family had excellent and immediate medical care in an insurance based medical scheme.
Later, back in the UK, I suffered some illness which was eventually identified as an overactive Thyroid. The symptoms had been there for several weeks but the problem was only identified when I attended a routine blood test in connection with my diabetes. I saw a GP immediately who said that no further treatment was necessary. Not satisfied with this I requested seeing an endocrinologist. This took a further two months but I was immediately put on medication which dealt with the problem. When I questioned my GP asking why he had not put me on medication or immediately referred me to a specialist, his reply was that if he referred all of his patients with my problem, the Specialist would not be able to cope!!! In the meantime he was content for me to continue in ill health!! My experience here and in Bermuda made me feel that private health insurance offers a better deal.
Excellent! And worrying.
Oh dear, I lost Wiggia but good to see him popping up elsewhere.
Sam - on Wiggia's behalf, thanks.
Henry - yet the NHS is virtually untouchable mainly thanks to the Labour party. My treatment has been good but a family member has received hopeless treatment for a serious condition. Happens too often as you found.
Sackers - yes both.
James - isn't he popping up at yours too?
I too am of the opinion that these days it is necessary to call an ambulance when there is an acute condition such as you mention.
Many years ago I moved medical practices because it was not providing my needs. Since then all the silly rules have come in and the practice I left is one of those that can't get an appointment unless you book in advance! As if we can book are illnesses to suite the surgery :-O
The practice I have moved to has not yet gone down that route and on the one occasion when I have had an emergency problem they were able to find a solution so I could be seen the same day. I was booked in to see the locum who had a bad dismissive attitude when I arrived, I suspected he had been dealing with a lot of time wasters before I arrived. His attitude changed when I told him I had a problem with my eye. It had suddenly become bloodshot and puffed up for no reason... He looked at my eye and did the obligatory temperature test via a new fangled device in my ear. He then phoned the emergency eye clinic and booked me an appointment later that day and informed me that I was not allowed to drive. The problem was driving home after the potential treatment.
When I have minor problems, there is a way to get appointments within a few days. My mother still attends the surgery I left. She can't get an appointment unless she books in advance.
I love your tales of the people you met during your stay in hospital :-)
Cherry - our practice is okay so far, it is possible to get a quick appointment one way or another. The one we left is not so good though.
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