Hear it but dont see it.

No one said that on this thread, dont start the idiot off :oops:
Someone said "Have you seen how many people are in the country now? It is jam packed"

What would you infer from that?

Sadly experiences like this are commonplace, but it's as much to do with other service branches such as GP's and adult social care that are overstretched and underfunded.
 
....

But when I did finally get on a ward, post surgery, I heard story after story from people who came onto my section about how A&E was rammed and there were trolleys all down the corridors, out of A&E and down the main corridors. There were ambos outside who couldn't discharge their patients into hospital care, so we're looking after them in the vehicles.

And this was nearly 12 months ago.
My God!, and you're still there?

;)
 
I had a visit to A&E via an Ambulance on Wednesday. I was shocked at the amount of people in the corridors on beds, A&E was jam packed.

Thank your trecherous politicians for overloading everything with the extra numbers of people. The majority of whose contribution is, at best, minimal. Everything is overloaded, the country is bust, and yet they import more millions. Politicians = traitors.
 
Thank your trecherous politicians for overloading everything with the extra numbers of people. The majority of whose contribution is, at best, minimal. Everything is overloaded, the country is bust, and yet they import more millions. Politicians = traitors.
People are not imported. :rolleyes:
Then you build on your false premise with further theories. :rolleyes:

Not to worry 5th November is fast approaching. You can let off your fireworks then. :ROFLMAO:
 
Why do the media keep calling them trolleys when they are trying to attack the NHS -"trolleys in corridors" - They are beds with wheels --- all the beds in the hospital have wheels.
 
My God!, and you're still there?

;)
:ROFLMAO: :ROFLMAO: :ROFLMAO:

Thankfully not. I broke it on November 23 and finally got discharged on December 23. But due to a massive cockup, I was told not to walk by the ward physio team after having an air cast boot fitted when I should have been walking. I got sent home in an ambo as I wasn't supposed to walk and came back to hospital on 13 January for a check up with the surgeon. He asked how I was getting on with walking. I said, what walking?

I explained what had happened and he was horrified that I hadn't walked a step since getting the boot over a month before.

He immediately got a nurse to remove the boot and clean the foot and fit a new stocking (what a pen and ink!), then sent me a Physio to start walking.

Still, things could be worse.

Back to the present, I am still getting treatment for it. I need more Physio too, it looks like what the surgeon said is true, that arthritis is beginning to appear. The joint is now, while not painful, uncomfortable most of the day. And I am still walking much slower than I was before the slip.
 
Why do the media keep calling them trolleys when they are trying to attack the NHS -"trolleys in corridors" - They are beds with wheels --- all the beds in the hospital have wheels.
Yes. All beds in hospitals have wheels, but all wheeled things in hospitals are not beds.

Having spent a fair proportion of my life in hospital, and some of that time on portable devices in corridors, I can confidently say that they are NOT beds. Yes, they are metallic frames with wheels, but there the similarity stops.

Many come in from ambos, which have the "trolleys" of which the media speak. They can in no way be described as beds.
 
I watched 24 hours in A&E the other night and the paramedics spent virtually the whole shift waiting in the ambulance and then in a corridor with the same elderly woman.

Its a broken system but the paramedics are doing a brilliant job.

We're all going to pay the price for it though. All this waiting around in ambulances means that paramedics are getting no experience. If a magic wand was waved today, and all that waiting problem vanished, we'd have an influx of inexperienced paramedics.
 
Have you seen how many people are in the country now? It is jam packed.
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When I smashed up my ankle last November, I started off in Warrington Gen, as that was nearest to where I slipped. If I had got an ambo, I'd have requested my local hospital, but that ambo would have taken nearly 5 hours and I was lying on cold wet concrete. So Mrs S and a fellow car charger dragged me screaming into the back of the car and she took me instead. Anyway, I digress. There was a lot of politics between Warrington and Stockport. I mean, I thought the "N" in NHS stood for National, but it seems if you break your ankle outside your area, they don't want to fix it!

The surgeon told us that local cases would take precident over me. All the time, the need to fix my joint in place properly was getting more and more urgent; it had to be done before the two week deadline.

Luckily, I was eventually transferred to my local hospital, but there was not a bed for me. Then they found me a bed in the Maternity wing. Then the lift was broken and the nurses on the ward asked if they could take me back to Warrington? Meanwhile, my bed in Warrington had gone to someone else....it was like a Carry on film...

But when I did finally get on a ward, post surgery, I heard story after story from people who came onto my section about how A&E was rammed and there were trolleys all down the corridors, out of A&E and down the main corridors. There were ambos outside who couldn't discharge their patients into hospital care, so we're looking after them in the vehicles.

And this was nearly 12 months ago.

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