Some dots to join

Join the dots …

 

Ian Blair (when he was actually Commissioner of the Metropolitan Police;) said “to paraphrase another great American, Mark Twain, on reading his obituary, accounts of my demise are premature.” http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/uk_news/politics/5101180.stm 

 

If London can survive the Blitz It can survive four miserable bombers”

Ian Blair 8 July 2005

 

The Death card from Crowley's Thoth TarotThoth Tarot’s Death card, the letter Nun, value 50.

 

 

 

Continue ReadingSome dots to join

NHS news review

The Guardian reports that waiting times are increasing.

Mary Salisbury says that when she needed the NHS “it wasn’t there for me”. This is likely to be how most people will experience the Con-Dems brutal attack on the NHS. They are unaware that the Conservatives and the Liberal-Democrats are destroying the NHS. One day when they really need it, it simply won’t be there for them.

The Guardian has an editorial urging Lib-Dem MPs to wake up on the NHS.

Conservative election poster 2010

A few recent news articles concerning the UK’s Conservative and Liberal-Democrat coalition government – the ConDem’s – brutal attack on the National Health Service.

NHS waiting time increases may cost lives, doctors warn | Society | The Guardian

Delays could mean illnesses reach stage where surgery or drugs cannot treat them, chair of BMA’s consultants committee says

Patients could die because of rising NHS waiting lists for tests and treatment, the leader of Britain’s hospital doctors has warned. Delays in identifying conditions such as cancer may mean that a patient’s illness reaches the stage where surgery or drugs cannot save them, Dr Mark Porter told the Guardian.

Porter, chairman of the British Medical Association’s consultants committee, said the growing delays were “inhumane” because the ensuing uncertainty added to patients’ fear and suffering.

His remarks will add to the pressure on David Cameron, who has offered several recent personal guarantees that patients will not have to endure long waits to be treated.

A Guardian analysis of official NHS data on England’s six main waiting time targets shows that five are increasingly being breached. The number of patients waiting more than six weeks for a diagnostic test such as an MRI scan has quadrupled in the last year, an extra 2,400 people a month are not being treated within 18 weeks, and 200,000 patients waited longer than four hours in A&E this year compared with the same period in 2010, the data reveals.

The growing number not being tested or treated within the required time limits was of particular concern, Porter said. “If patients are now exceeding those times, then those patients’ treatment options are being limited, and if that happens then there’s a potential for patients suffering harm.

“It may be that someone’s disease progresses beyond the point where surgery might usually give a cancer patient a potential cure, but the patient then receives palliative care only,” he said.

NHS waiting times: one women’s agonising delay | Society | The Guardian

A special needs teacher says the wait she endured for surgery on her back problem was inhumane and unspeakable

Mary Salisbury, a retired special needs teacher, was advised to have back surgery in June 2010. But the operation did not happen until March 2011, even though NHS rules say it should have been carried out within 18 weeks.

“My back trouble began in 2009. I had an MRI scan in February 2010 at St Mary’s hospital in Newport on the Isle of Wight, where I live. But I then had to wait until early June to see the consultant, as he only visits the island once a month from Southampton. He immediately recommended an operation called a laminectomy to relieve the pressure on the nerve between my fourth and fifth vertebrae, which was being crushed and causing me severe pain, a condition called a lumbar stenosis.

“The consultant said the waiting time was about 12 weeks. First, I was told the surgery should be in September or October, and then November or December. But I was never given a definite date. Every time I rang Southampton General hospital the operation receded further and further into the distance. Just before Christmas, I was told it would be 31 January, but that was cancelled. So were three subsequent operations, two of them on the day after I’d stayed in Southampton the night before and arrived as instructed at 7.30am.

“The surgery finally happened on 23 March this year – 42 weeks after I’d first seen the consultant, but a year and six weeks after I’d had the MRI scan. I’ve been sorted now, happily. But the wait I had to endure for treatment was inhumane and unspeakable. I was in a lot of pain, but I wasn’t being treated. They said priority cases were being treated. Why wasn’t I a priority? I was in serious pain and distress, couldn’t sleep properly and became depressed. I’d always been a healthy person and never needed the NHS beforehand. Yet when I needed it, it wasn’t there for me.

Health warning – Our view – Yorkshire Post

NO Government policy is enjoying a smooth passage at present, not least David Cameron’s NHS changes that face renewed scrutiny. The news that GPs could earn premium rates of up to £100 an hour to take on additional budgetary duties perpetuates the belief that health spending is being recycled rather than redirected to patients.

As even more demands are placed on taxpayers, many will be uncomfortable at the prospect of GPs earning more money than well-remunerated NHS chief executives. The rate will vary dramatically depending on the area they work in, another cause for concern.

There also remains confusion over how much of the money will go direct to the GPs, and how much will fund the costs of locum cover. These vital details need to be established quickly.

The rates are being negotiated locally and the apparent lack of guidance from Westminster will do little to allay fears that the NHS reforms have been ill-conceived.

Such lucrative hourly rates will raise concerns that shielding the NHS from cuts was a backward step, allowing significant funds to remain at the top of the organisation rather than filtering down to patients.

That the figures only came to light following an investigation by this newspaper is further indicative of the lack of clarity surrounding Mr Cameron’s reforms, even in their revised format, and why further changes are likely to be necessary.

Continue ReadingNHS news review

Coming soon

Looking at Ian Blair and various names, abbreviations of those names and salutations.

edit: My mistake. I’m looking at formal titles not salutations.

later edit: There are two aspects: covert and overt. Covert, hidden messages and overt harassment e.g. “Houston, we have a problem”, involving using the vast resources of the state against one individual. All those involved – Ian Blair, Tony Blair, Reid, Straw, Blunkett, Charles Clarke, Campbell, and later Jackie Smith [11/7/11 Jacqui Smith] are absolute f’ing scum.

Continue ReadingComing soon

NHS news review

Conservative election poster 2010

A few recent news articles concerning the UK’s Conservative and Liberal-Democrat coalition government – the ConDem’s – brutal attack on the National Health Service.

NHS ‘shocking’ in parts, says Andrew Lansley – Telegraph

Speaking to members of the NHS Confederation, which represents healthcare managers, Andrew Lansley said that variation between areas was evidence that the service could be “so much better”.

He cited a recent report on care for the dying by Tom Hughes-Hallet, the chief executive of Marie Curie Cancer Care, which found some health authorities spend more than £6,000 on palliative care for each dying person, while one spent just £186.

He told the annual conference of the NHS Confederation in Manchester: “I know people are generally satisfied with the NHS. But if people were only aware of the variations in the quality, they’d be shocked!

GPs paid £100 an hour for new NHS duties – Main Section – Yorkshire Post

TAXPAYERS are forking out premium rates of up to £100 an hour for GPs in the region to take on new duties under the Government’s landmark NHS reforms, the Yorkshire Post can reveal.

The rate for roles commissioning services is equivalent to around £180,000 a year – more than the annual pay for most NHS chief executives.

Doctors in North Lincolnshire are being paid the highest £100 an hour fee which is twice as much as in neighbouring Doncaster.

Across the region, rates vary significantly for duties on new GP commissioning groups, which will each take charge of hundreds of millions of pounds in NHS spending.

Ministers claim their plans for health service reconfiguration will save taxpayers billions of pounds by axing layers of bureaucracy but doubts have already been raised about the likely impact.

Unison and private companies clash over any qualified provider policy | GPonline.com

Unison has renewed its attack on the policy to allow any qualified provider to deliver NHS care after the government said it would push ahead with its plans.

The public sector union claimed the policy was ‘perverse’ at a time of NHS cuts and said it was privatisation by the back door.

But private companies defended the proposal saying it would allow charities to take a bigger role in delivering NHS services.

The any qualified provider policy will see NHS and private providers compete for contracts based on quality and cost. The government says it will improve patient choice.

The NHS Future Forum opted to retain the policy in its recommendations on the Health Bill last month.

Karen Jennings, head of health at Unison, debated the plans during a lively exchange at the UK Faculty of Public Health’s annual conference in Birmingham on Monday.

Ms Jennings told attendees: ‘We are moving towards wholesale competition in the NHS.’

If the any qualified provider policy is adopted, ‘we will have an NHS based on pure, unfettered market’, she warned.

She claimed plans to increase patient choice could actually raise NHS costs if they opt for more expensive options and was ‘perverse’ at a time of stringent cuts.

The choice agenda is a first step towards co-payments for some care, she added, which will eventually lead to a US-style health insurance model.

‘This is the road to ruin for the NHS,’ she said.

Continue ReadingNHS news review