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Re: Free NHS prescriptions
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Re: Free NHS prescriptions
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I think the free prescriptions announced today a good policy. |
Re: Free NHS prescriptions
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If I buy Anadin for my flu rather than the prescribed paracetamol, should I no longer receive NHS treatment if my flu turns into pneumonia? Sorting that out, to me, is more important than not charging people who already aren't charged for medication. Course it would cost more, and the reality behind this idea is that it's just to try and win votes, not actually help people. |
Re: Free NHS prescriptions
It's one of those *new* labour things.. If you're an ordinary bloke and you go a bit 'private' then they despise you as having elitist ideas and they hang you out to die..
However, if you're rich enough to bung a couple of million into the party bank acounts then you can do no wrong. Rip off the pension funds of millions of working people and you'll still remain untouched.. |
Re: Free NHS prescriptions
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Re: Free NHS prescriptions
http://www.timesonline.co.uk/tol/com...cle4812952.ece
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Re: Free NHS prescriptions
All in yesterday's Times.
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Re: Free NHS prescriptions
I don't know why people use GPs anymore. You can Google your condition and gain accurate, in-depth information - more than anything your GP can provide. If you want to see a doctor, there are walk-in centres where you can be seen far quicker (20 minutes versus up to two weeks) than visiting your GP. It's not like the family doctor exists anymore - just a different locum from one week to the next. Casualty is there for acute problems and injuries. Shut the GP surgeries. Build more walk-in centres. The odd poly-clinic so that some secondary and specialist care can be provided more readily. Put the saved cash into providing better NHS services, including free prescriptions for all.
Just a thought :shrug: |
Re: Free NHS prescriptions
I reckon it's all spin... Brown loves to announce "new" money that has been around for years, and this time he is trying it on again. Most chronic illnesses including diabetes allow for free meds and equipment already... let's hope this extends to asthma, COPD, etc.
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Re: Free NHS prescriptions
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A Beloved sisiter, Mother and ex-boyfriend all had one thing to say about thier treatment......... 'the staff were wonderful'. It's going to be an exraordinary doctor/consultant that eventually concedes that the 'condition' is most likely to be 'terminal' in the early stages when everyone around the person is busy considering what can and should be done for them. Back to the OP - it's a start? The 'free' NHS isn't quite so free because of funding and keeping up with research and red tape IMHO. |
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The other thing, which was not mentioned in his speech, is allowing people to buy the expensive, newer, drugs. ---------- Post added at 13:51 ---------- Previous post was at 13:45 ---------- Quote:
For example MS is a disease which encompasses a wide range of symptoms which most of the time are simply normal, and only rarely are indications of something more serious. Having 1000's of people lining up to take tests for it would increase pressure on the NHS. The internet is a poor substitute for a medically trained professional. A lot of people make this mistake of presuming they know better than the experts hence all the health advice in the Daily Mail and others. |
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Your joke about thousands of people having tests I don't find particularly amusing as I believe that a lack of diagnosis processes is one of the fundamental problems. The idea that we'd end up with millions of hypochondriacs is a ridiculous one too. Plenty of people don't like visiting the GPs, you have a quota system where you have to redial for half an hour and are informed by a sometimes snooty and rude receptionist to try again tomorrow. If you're lucky enough to get an appointment the doctor will tell you that it is unlikely you have condition x, you're fine go away unless it gets worse and subsequent times repeated message. I'm rarely ill, I don't bother medics for ordinary things such as sore throats that I used to get quite often (others get colds or bugs often). When something is seriously wrong I have reasonable grounds to go and seek an opinion I think. I think millions of people are the same and it is not much to ask. To those who think I'm paranoid there's an ever growing list of friends and relatives that have gone to GPs after suffering symptoms for a while with a theory about what they have to ask for an opinion and the GP has told them to hop it. These are diabetes (x2), kidney stones (x2), reflux, fits, angina, stroke (x2). In each case after even more serious symptoms appear (too late in some cases) it was later agreed grudgingly that the patients weren't delusional. |
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Re: Free NHS prescriptions
I didn't quite say that. But how it works in practice is somewhere inbetween the extremes that people have posted - the doctor always being right and the patient knowing nothing and the patient somehow knowing everything and doctors being useless. The patient is after all the one familiar with their body and what is and isn't normal (to an extent). Depends what you mean by diagnosis really. It relates to one of the points greencreeper made about locums is an important point in this respect. For example one of the cases of kidney stones was being treated for something else but x-rays and other tests picked up evidence of kidney stones but as it was a different department and seen as less urgent the info was sent off to the GPs for referral. Patient went to see GP three times where they said they were sure it wasn't a problem. Had overnight attack, went into A&E, x-rays and other tests carried out immediately, whisked off to the ward, operated on in days, hospital medics wondering later WTF had gone on as they thought the stuff in the GP notes warranted investigation. It wasn't really a case of that person turning up at the surgery and unreasonably saying to the doctor I have this, this and this, it was supported by evidence and symptoms.
What is a GPs job? That's pretty much what people are talking about here. ---------- Post added at 16:17 ---------- Previous post was at 16:04 ---------- Quote:
The other thing you and maggie seem to be assuming is taking the google thing too literally. Many people get some of their info from other means such as Pharmacists or from what doctors have said to them in the past, perhaps a reoccuring condition. Having doctors and the system act like the 1950s where we're all supposed to take off our cap to them and have them tell us we're all morons is not really the way to run a service. P.S. I agree about the free prescription, still thinks it's a good policy. |
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