Dear All
If coronavirus has taught us anything it is, how fragile life can be, not just for the few but everyone. When I was younger, I thought that doctors were special, that they knew everything, and had all the solutions. This was the illusion of youth coupled with lack of experience of usage. Doctors don’t have all the answers, and medicine isn’t an exact science, I found this out in the latter end of 2014. Having finished the Scottish referendum, my health took a serious decline, as I had an age related illness. After several weeks in pain, I ended up at the QUEH, after being examined by a doctor in his 30’s, explaining extensively the problem, I was kicked out as a time waster. Fast forward 55 hours in incredible agony and a trip to the GP, I was back at said hospital rushed in as an emergency. A nurse who remembered me for two days earlier said to me, ‘you back again’. I said, ‘yes, apparently I am dying’. The nurse rushed off after my matter of fact reply, I was dragged in treated immediately and then after some tests, told; ‘you are not going anywhere’. It seemed the lack of treatment had affected my kidneys so badly that I had to be kept in. This was my first experience of a hospital stay which lasted 5 days.
During my time on the ward, just before the transfer to the new hospital, my eyes were opened quite a bit. Luckily for me, the patient in the next bed was a man called Stanley Ockrim, he kept my spirits up and I needed to as I saw the sights around me. When you see people with tubes coming out of them, huge bags of saline hung over their beds, and heard others screaming, you know you are seeing something that normally you don’t on a visit. When I later had to return for surgery, it was the new hospital, own room and contact only with nurses or friends who made it up to my floor. Leaving hospital post surgery, I was wiped out physically; the loss of so much blood had drained me of oxygen carrying red blood cells. The blood volume was made up, by drinking water, but the red blood cell count took longer. Nearly a year after the operation, I returned for an outpatient visit to another hospital; that was to give me the all clear from cancer. I relate this tale, not for sympathy, but to remind people that doctors don’t have all the answers.
As coronavirus rages on across
In
The
And has failed!
One doctor said his practice in
Having avoided the ‘work’, it is left to Dr John Montgomery
of the David Elder Medical Practice to carry out his own research looking at
patient numbers through lockdown and over the subsequent months. He runs a
practice in one of the 100 most deprived communities in
In March, the Govan practice saw 19% fewer patient appointments compared to the same month in 2019 as “patients tried to protect the NHS”. Whereas anyone can understand their concerns on being stoic, we can also understand that sometimes, people can be too brave for their own good. Health isn’t a subject you can gamble with, at some stage, you will need specialised help; it is just a matter of when.
GPs are right to be worried, as Dr. Montgomery said:
“Demand is going up quite significantly and patients are starting to struggle now with being told they have to book appointments. I have serious concerns if this keep going. Patients, if they have problems, are no longer hesitant in coming forward. Mental health consultations have gone up significantly so that’s going to be another factor. Paradoxically we are now the first point of contact so we are getting things sent through to us that would be better dealt with by other professionals.”
Louisa Jordan Hospital should be brought online because the more ways to release pressure on services where it is needed, the better chance GPs can manage the ‘backlog’ of trouble that has been stored up. You could ask; why since SNP Health Sec Jeane Freeman who spent so much time as ‘Health Quango Queen’ raking in cash not been able to come up with ideas? Why is Freeman is so bad at her job, the reality is that she isn’t there to lead, she is there to do partial oversight, and then desert her desk. Just as the SNP is driven by nepotism, one can only wonder does that extend to her ‘little helpers’ which she calls her team? Freeman is a puppet, nothing can get done unless Sturgeon approves, in some ways, no one can be creative unless they can factor in how it makes Sturgeon look good!
Dr Philip Wilson is a Professor of Primary Care and Rural Health at the University of Aberdeen, as a retired GP, he said he had grown frustrated with the shift to remote consultations ahead of the pandemic.
He added:
“It feels like I got out at the right time. I always felt that face-to-face consultations should be the mainstay of general practice. The key issue is that general practice is in a terrible mess: medical students don’t want to be GPs and I’m not even sure I would want to be one now if I was 40 years younger. And it seems like the Scottish Government is keen to replace GPs with other clinicians like pharmacists and advanced nurse practitioners so many GPs seem to have ended up just seeing people for the problems that are too difficult for the other team members to deal with. One really big concern I have about all this is that people who want personal continuity of care from a doctor will end up seeking private GP care and that would be a real disaster for the NHS.”
Finally, the SNP, the Sturgeon answer is that when there is
a problem, the solution is to fling money at it. Nicola Sturgeon did this in
Govanhill and she is doing it with the hospital problem. What she isn’t doing
is, understanding the problem, and enacting proper solutions. What we need in
the NHS in
Yours sincerely
George Laird The Campaign for Human Rights at Glasgow University
4 comments:
Whilst it is always good to see a balanced view, my view of SHNS despite, like yourself having has my life saved, is less benign.
Many SNHS lifers are their own worse enemies.
Whilst having a extremely well paid job with little or no responsibilities they suddenly find their worlds turned upside down.
There is a trend towards sitting in their locked practices and unknowingly belittling anyone who comes forwards for the routine.
HOW BLOODY WELL DARE THEY don't they know there is a pandemic on? (and yes, unfortunately I know too well the psychological effect of wishing you could fall asleep, if only for a short time, so the coughing/pain would stop. Tempered by the fear of will you actually wake up].
When it comes to the stage that you cannot GET YOUR EAR SYRINGED
"BECAUSE OF THE PANDEMIC WORKLOAD"
you are left asking yourself
WHAT WORKLOAD THE PLACE IS FUCKING EMPTY!
yours
WM..
and yet they still support the cow
Dental services are suffering as well. I'm all in favour of protecting the vulnerable, and make sure I mask up etc when out.
But Sturgeon is losing it. You are correct in asserting that she is a control freak, and that is dangerous.
Why does nobody see the developing parallels in the methods of exercising power between Ms Sturgeon and Mr Salmond's patron, Mr Putin?
Putin and Sturgeon are both haters and, as a result, blame all their woes, failures and floaters on America (Putin) and the English (Sturgeon). Neither can see themselves the way others do (pace Robt. Burns). There is a serious psychological issue here.
Luckily we have the rule of law (still) in Scotland, and free elections - though personally I think the independence of the judiciary would not last long under a Sturgeonist government. I have argued this in my new book, which went on sale today. The Justice Factory: Can the Rule of Law Survive in Twenty-First Century Scotland?
https://www.amazon.co.uk/dp/1981993401?ref_=pe_3052080_397514860
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