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Re: Still support them
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Re: Still support them
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The British Medical Journal wouldn't be publishing non-peer reviewed work. There are too many studies in the UK and from around for the world for it not to be an issue. Even if it isn't an issue, so what. Quote:
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Re: Junior Doctors Prepare For First Full Walk-Out
The biggest trouble with the NHS. Is that there is NOT enough being umped into it. And the Tories hate spending the Money into it, as they are not getting anything from it.
I was reading recently where, patients are being sent miles from home for treatment as there are no beds. In the region where they live. We have elderly being kept in hospital as there is a shortage of care in the home. There fore they are taking up beds. Which can be used for Urgent care patients. My neighbour has been moved SIX times to separate wards. As they needed the bed in the acute care dept. where he is. And he has been there one week tomorrow. And he cannot come home. As he has gone yellow. And been told that he has cancer. Lymphoma - I think that's what they call it. A large lump on his neck Jeremy Hunt isn't a Dr. So is going on info from NHS England. What the Government has to do is sit round a table and sort this mess out. I strongly believe that Drs and Nurses should get the high wage deserve. And you cannot have SEVEN DAY service, unless you pay for it. If you were working Five days, and they wanted yu to work extra hours for nothing. Would you do it. I wouldn't do it. |
Re: Junior Doctors Prepare For First Full Walk-Out
OK, so where's this utter garbage(and that's putting very politely) about working extra hours and no extra money coming from?
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Re: Still support them
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If the rationales used to justify the 7 day service are false then perhaps we don't need as 7 day nhs after all. ---------- Post added at 22:52 ---------- Previous post was at 22:49 ---------- Quote:
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How many studies do you need from around the world that have all firmly established the "weekend effect". It is the medical profession doing the studies. |
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Re: Junior Doctors Prepare For First Full Walk-Out
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Still nothing to do with the new contract and the strike. |
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Still nothing to do with the strike and the new contract. Nothing will ever change that fact. |
Re: Still support them
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On the 7-day NHS though I do think the Goverment are trying to get it on the cheap. 2 extra days requires more funding surely? Substantially more funding. Maybe not 40% as I doubt their budgets scale like that but certainly a hefty increase. Then we also need more doctors. How is a 5 day week going to stretch to a 7 day week? You can adjust the timetables so the hospitals are staffed more on weekends but are we suggesting that the doctors sit around doing nothing during the week? If not then the coverage on weekdays will suffer. Spreading the same amount of butter on a large slice of toast will give you thinner..err..butterage. Personally I would sooner seen the government abandon, for now, the plans for a 7 day NHS until such a time they have a clearer idea of how to fund it and how to staff it. If that requires reform into how we pay for the NHS (separate tax?) then so be it. I also think any politician who says we can have better services at the same cost is a liar. We already don't push the boat out on spending compared to European countries. For whatever reforms we can introduce to help the solution to this problem is more money. |
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I always saw a 7 day NHS more of a load spreading exercise ,for example,if a hospital treats 100,000 in/out patients over 5 days surely it's better to treat the same 100,000 patients over 7 days ,less work load on the doctors and nurses.There will naturally have to be more doctors and nurses but the NHS is having a big recruitment drive anyway due to staff shortages .The main reason for a 7 day NHS is for out patients really imo |
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