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NHS (anything relating to it)

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NHS (anything relating to it) Empty NHS Devon surgery restriction for smokers and obese plan revealed

Post  candyfloss Wed 03 Dec 2014, 9:05 pm

So you have to stop smoking for at least 8 weeks and not be too fat to have an operation.  Is this right or wrong. What do you think??


NHS Devon surgery restriction for smokers and obese plan revealed

Smokers and the morbidly obese in Devon will be denied routine surgery unless they quit smoking or lose weight.

Patients with a BMI of 35 or above will have to shed 5% of their weight while smokers will have to quit eight weeks before surgery.

More on link....

http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-england-devon-30318546

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Post  chirpyinsect Wed 03 Dec 2014, 9:11 pm

It is a tough one Candy. In one sense doctors are there to help save lives and shouldn't be playing judge and jury however people risk their own lives by smoking and having an unhealthy diet.
I suppose if it is routine ops only then they are actually helping the patient as it lessens the risk whilst on the operating table.
Glad I don't live in Devon as I could do with a few pounds off. Gave up the fags though.
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Post  Lioned Wed 03 Dec 2014, 10:03 pm

Its a little ambiguous or i'm not quite getting it ?

Seems to be a deliberate attempt to manipulate the waiting lists to meet targets.In other words take fat people and smokers off the list until they behave for 8 weeks.

Maybe i got that wrong but apart from that the NHS is in a terrible mess.Can't pretend to understand how the funding works and how they have such a deficit but i have seen so many examples of inefficiency which comes down to appallingly bad management.Overpaid 'suits' that wouldnt hold down a proper job most likely.

Generally though i would say that forcing people to give up smoking and food (loose weight) in an 8 week period is likely to induce stress that could make things worse for them.

As a reformed smoker and a bmi index bordering on perfection i am well entitled to hold the high ground and jump to the front of the queue.

So if you smoke and are overweight then i have no problem in principle that you should be made to wait until you make an effort to improve your health.








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Post  Poppy Wed 03 Dec 2014, 11:08 pm

Makes me flipping sick,has a 16 year old I left School on the Friday and started work the following Monday and have worked and pay'd my taxes for the last 40 years and so has my Husband.I doubt we have visited a Doctor more than 30 times between us in all those years,Some people go to the Doctors if they so much has sneeze,the NHS don't give a bugger about people like me and my Husband and neither do the Government' labour, Conservatives at the end of the day they all piss in the same pot and all sing from the same Hymn sheet,t all in my opinion of course.
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Post  chirpyinsect Thu 04 Dec 2014, 6:56 am

I reckon you have just about nailed it there Lioned. My hubby was a health care professional all his life and he is exasperated by the decline in standards he has seen over the years. It is always down to underfunding due in part to a top heavy management led ethos.
At grass roots the NHS staff deserve nothing but praise but they are struggling against a tide of enormous proportions which prevents them doing the job they would like to do.
By the way the standards of health care in Scotland are vastly superior to those in England. That is fact.
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Post  Guest Thu 04 Dec 2014, 10:11 am

In NL you have to pay a monthly insurance which is pretty steep. There is no way out of this it is mandatory. I pay around 150 euros a month. This only includes certain care and medicine, you have to pay extra if you want e.g. extra physio care, (I have 12 half hours a year, more and I have to pay) lots of extra charges for more care. You are insured for emergencies but there is a yearly fee on top of the insurance which is now around 400 euros.
If you don't use the health services at all during the year you don't have to pay this 'own risk'. What I think of the system isn't fit to print.
My first visit to the GP I was informed I needed glucosamine something or other. He then told me it wasn't on prescription and would cost me about 350 euros a year. Wrote it down and told me which chemist to buy it..I thought I'd arrived in an alternative universe.

The National Health should always have been taxed imo. It wouldn't be in the mess it's in now. the PFI haven't exactly helped either. Wasn't Milburn the great mind who organised it?

I do agree that people who do not take care of their health and expect to be treated as if their condition is an act of God instead of their lifestyle may well have to wait and make an effort first. One also thinks of alcoholics who get a liver transplant and then carry on drinking.. no way!

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Post  Mimi Thu 04 Dec 2014, 11:15 am

Our NHS is not free - everyone has been paying about 12% of their earnings every year of their working lives in their National Insurance Contributions which is mandatory, so it is the same as paying an insurance. Most of us have paid in far more than we`ve got out. But I`m sure people wouldn`t mind paying extra national insurance contributions if it meant our NHS was improved.

btw - there are many illnesses which cause people to put on weight, hypothyroidism for example and it has nothing to do with lifestyle or over eating.
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Post  Guest Thu 04 Dec 2014, 1:29 pm

Ah, but the National Insurance also covers pensions and that takes a big bite out of the proceeds. 
Whereas the health insurance here is something you have to keep paying until you're dead and up to pension age you also pay a 'National Insurance' for your pension on top.

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Post  Mimi Thu 04 Dec 2014, 1:52 pm

Yes you`re right Tigger. What happens in the NL if someone is unemployed or a pensioner and cannot afford to pay the mandatory amount?
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Post  Guest Thu 04 Dec 2014, 4:32 pm

They get enough to live on and get help with the health insurance etc. Pensioners still pay the health insurance, this has to come out of their pension, if that is not enough, the pension is topped up but that's as good as it gets. Although pension here is much more than in UK generally.

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Post  bluebell Thu 04 Dec 2014, 5:57 pm

I have been told that in Southern Ireland one has to pay for each visit to see a GP. I was told it was about £50.

I don't know how this works for pensioners, children or the chronically sick. Or if it is just for the primary visit then following consultations are less.

Health insurance must be available mustn't it?

Please someone correct me if I have been misinformed.

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Post  Thetruth Thu 04 Dec 2014, 6:31 pm

bluebell wrote:I have been told that in Southern Ireland one has to pay for each visit to see a GP.     I was told it was about £50.
   
I don't know how this works for pensioners, children or the chronically sick.     Or if it is just for the primary visit then following consultations are less.

Health insurance must be available mustn't it?

Please someone correct me if I have been misinformed.

No knowledge of Ireland, but in France the principle is that you pay for all your health costs at the point of delivery. But your assurance will pay you back 70% and if you can buy insurance for the 30% if you wish.
If you are say self employed, you pay an insurance to the self employed assurers, as you go which covers the 70% part and eventually your retirement pension.

If you visit a GP, you pay directly across the desk the price of the consultation which is 23 euros. The doctor uses your smart card provided by your assurance, and they reimburse you 70% electronically.

Big works, eg hospitalization are cleared beforehand and you are removed from the payment loop.

Works very well indeed. There is never any doubt about who is the customer and who is the provider. The rule is that somebody has to pay the provider.

There are lots of exceptions to cover all the 'yeah but' situations you may think of.

Forgot to say, that in this situation the idea that the provider could decide who they will treat and when (ie fat smokers as in UK) would simply never arise.


Last edited by Thetruth on Thu 04 Dec 2014, 6:37 pm; edited 2 times in total (Reason for editing : Grammar)
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Post  bluebell Thu 11 Dec 2014, 5:48 pm

Just read this on BBC North Devon news.

I would be very interested in the format of the "helpful public debate".
A mass of complaints I imagine.
I am very pleased that it has forced them to see sense and perform this about turn nevertheless.





http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-england-devon-30437965

Plans to place conditions on routine surgery for smokers and the morbidly obese in Devon have been dropped.

The Northern, Eastern and Western Devon Clinical Commissioning Group (NEW Devon CCG) had proposed the plan to help cut a £14.5m deficit.

The Royal College of Surgeons, which was among the critics, said losing weight was not possible for some.

The CCG, which organises the delivery of health services, reversed the plan following feedback.

As part of cost-cutting measures announced in October, patients with a BMI of 35 or above would have had to shed 5% of their weight while smokers would have had to quit eight weeks before non-essential surgery.

line
On Thursday the CCG announced that it would not require patients to undergo weight loss or stop smoking.

A spokesman said: "We announced a series of measures to improve health outcomes in October. This produced a helpful public debate which we have followed with interest.

"We have come to the conclusion that there is already a strong public acceptance of the need for people to continue to take responsibility for their own health and wellbeing.

"We have therefore decided to further promote smoking cessation and weight loss services to improve outcomes for patients."

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NHS (anything relating to it) Empty NHS Cuts to Cancer Drugs Announced

Post  bluebell Mon 12 Jan 2015, 5:54 pm

I hope it's OK to put this here, link to follow.

I understand the NHS is in dire straits, but to me this is terrible news.
   
I believe we (UK) has a poor survival rate for cancer compared to other countries.
 
I realise that early diagnosis is the absolute key to cure, but the knowledge that possible life-extending drugs/treatments are no longer to be available from our 'health service' is abysmal news.

"They" speak of demand causing this overspend - what !!  -  I'm sure noone wants to be in the position that they absolutely need these drugs, it is not by choice that they are needed.

Do you think we expect too much from the NHS ?


http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/health-30787132


BBC


12 January 2015 Last updated at 17:17
Cuts to cancer treatments announced

Drugs
Twenty-five different cancer treatments will no longer be funded by the NHS in England, health chiefs have announced.

NHS England was forced to take the step after it emerged the £280m Cancer Drugs Fund was going to go £100m over budget in 2014-15.

It was created in 2010 for expensive drugs not routinely available.

Some drugs have been removed completely, while others are being restricted depending on what type and how advanced the cancer is.

Patients currently receiving the treatments will still be allowed to continue using them.

The restrictions come into effect from 12 March and affect a whole range of treatments for breast, pancreatic and bowel cancer.

The only route available to patients wanting the drugs will be to apply through the exceptional cases route.

But success in getting them via that is considered unlikely.

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Post  Antonia Wed 14 Jan 2015, 4:39 pm

I'm wondering how many cancer drugs could have been purchased for the £10 million or so spent on the Madeleine 'review.'

Hasn't the 'review' been slightly scaled down - what is the approx annual cost now?
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NHS (anything relating to it) Empty 'Sick tax' car park charges are raking in millions for NHS hospitals as Tory clampdown fails to happen

Post  candyfloss Sun 11 Sep 2016, 11:10 am

Having experienced this quite a lot of late with my husband, this really does annoy me........



'Sick tax' car park charges are raking in millions for NHS hospitals as Tory clampdown fails to happen


There are increased calls for NHS parking to be made free after revenue at 41 trusts shot up from £36.9million in 2011 to £45.4million last year









Rip-off parking charges are raking in millions more for NHS hospitals , despite Tory promises of a clampdown.
Parking revenue at 41 hospital trusts shot up from £36.9million in 2011 to £45.4million last year – a rise of almost a quarter.
Government guidelines state relatives of seriously ill patients should be given free parking or reduced charges.
Concessions should also be offered to disabled patients and NHS staff.
Katherine Murphy of the Patients Association said it was a tax on the sick.
She said: “It should not be ­shouldered by the injured and vulnerable.”




The Lib Dems, who asked 100 trusts for figures, said NHS parking should be free.


http://www.mirror.co.uk/news/uk-news/sick-tax-car-park-charges-8811466

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Post  Mimi Mon 10 Oct 2016, 8:05 pm

What a day - had to go for an MRI scan.  The people who do it are not the NHS but a private contractor called In Health - I`d never heard of them.

I was interviewed by an Eastern European girl who could barely speak English - just a few necessary words for the job like metal/eye/pacemaker etc.  She hardly understood anything I said and was sharply spoken and impatient.  Because she didn`t understand what amalgam was, she went to ask her co-worker - and lo and behold this little darling was just like Charlene Tilton in Dallas (the poison dwarf, remember?) with a broad Texan drawl topped off with the most patronising tone addressing me as if I was a small child - my my my, why are the yanks so plastic?  I was livid enough when I came out of the `tube` because no one told me I`d be in there for 20 minutes !  I was starting to panic, thinking they had forgotten I was in there.

Any hoo - I feel like writing a complaint to these In House people saying PLEASE EMPLOY ENGLISH PEOPLE FIRST - is this the future?

Sorry everyone - had to get that off my chest  Mad

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Post  Freedom Mon 10 Oct 2016, 10:24 pm

It is blindingly obvious that anyone dealing with the public should be able to speak English!

I can understand how frustrated you felt, Mimi.
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Post  PMR Mon 10 Oct 2016, 10:32 pm

English- so no Scots Welsh or Irish then? But I suppose they might have accents as well
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Post  Mimi Mon 10 Oct 2016, 11:17 pm

PMR wrote:English- so no Scots Welsh or Irish then? But I suppose they might have accents as well

Ooh yes please - love the Scots accent, particularly the Aberdonian - and the Irish accent is quite lovely too, sometimes. Very Happy

Anyhoo - the point I was clumsily trying to make was that this was an example of how the NHS is stealthily being privatised by our government into the hands of tacky, badly run companies.

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Post  dannii Tue 11 Oct 2016, 9:45 pm

My beef with the NHS is the lack of care and the way some of these professionals speak to you,i am very seriously considering reporting my diabetic nurse and a GP. Iv'e been told that they are negligent in how they have been treating me or not in the case of the nurse,but fear always seems to take over.
The caring profession is quickly turning into the we dont care profession.
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Post  Hope Tue 11 Oct 2016, 11:38 pm

Your NHS is amazing in theory, it's heartbreaking the way it's slowly being dismantled into the clutches of private firms.

Mimi, that's terrible, the main thing you needed to know is how long MRI's last, you can ask for someone to touch your feet every few mins to reassure you. The tech should tell you what is happening. I have had 4 MRI's and hated every sec. As a chid if a ball went under cofa or bed I could nt go under for it, total fear of smothering. So I always kept my eyes shut and had nurses aide hold my foot. I feel so sorry you went through such an ordeal. Good luck with the resuts Mimi xx

Kylie, without knowing the facts I'd say go with your instincts and complain. Keep a record. Hope you are ok xxx
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Post  Mimi Wed 12 Oct 2016, 12:04 am

Thank you Hope for your kind words - yes I`m OK now. It`s only a trapped nerve in my spine which causes a lot of pain when I`m not on Gabapentin (great chill pill btw).

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Post  dannii Wed 12 Oct 2016, 12:30 am

Hi Hope,thank you for your concern and hope you feel better soon.

I will try post tomorrow about what happened through lack of care,it has now started affecting the brain especially the thought process.It takes ages to find the right words then when i do and go to type the words have gone so will need to write it first then type it,i have another post i want to answer so will need to do the same. I have a chest infection at the moment so apart from from being slow at typing i am spluttering all over the place.

Take care,
kylie xx
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Post  Hope Wed 12 Oct 2016, 1:00 am

Ahhh darling I'm so sorry to hear that. I type with one finger so I know how frustrating it is. There is so much I want to say about Maddie's case, new info, but it's not easy. I get a lot of chest infections, obviously from banjaxed immune system.
I wish I could help you, I don't know if you believe in a Faith but I do and will keep you in my prayers. Much love xxx
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