Saturday, July 02, 2005

BRITISH NHS HOSPITALS A "WAR ZONE"

A young doctor yesterday accused the Government of turning her hospital into a "war zone" as Patricia Hewitt became the first Health Secretary to address the British Medical Association in its 173-year history. Jennie Blackwell, a senior house officer, told Ms Hewitt that she and her colleagues dreaded going to work because Government targets had left her unit completely overwhelmed by patients. Describing chaotic pressures that left patients "strewn all round the unit", Dr Blackwell, who is a member of the Junior Doctors' Committee, said that people were often forced to wait for hours on trolleys in the corridor before they were treated.

Dr Blackwell, 27, took Ms Hewitt to task over the target that 98 per cent of accident and emergency patients should be seen and treated within four hours. She said that many patients were being moved from A&E [i.e. ER] into her medical assessment unit before they had been treated properly, simply to meet the target.

She added that life-threatening illnesses were getting overlooked as overstretched doctors struggled to cope, while paramedics were left waiting with patients instead of responding to new emergencies. "It's like a war zone," Dr Blackwell said of her hospital, which she declined to name but said was in the North West. "We have patients strewn all over the unit, sitting in non medical areas with serious medical conditions. It is frankly dangerous that we don't have the facilities to cope with these things. Please, please, please reduce this target as it's awful for patients and awful for us."

Speaking at the BMA's conference in Manchester - an experience she likened to "Daniel entering the lion's den" - Ms Hewitt said that targets were needed to help to achieve much-needed NHS improvements. "I'm not going to resile from the importance of those new, more limited number of targets," she said. "Although they are crude, they are helping to achieve a much needed improvement in the services."

Jonathan Fielden, the deputy chairman of the BMA's consultants committee, said that the problem had been raised by other doctors across the UK but he did not believe it was common. "It is a particular issue where NHS trusts focus on a target rather than the whole process of care for a patient," he said.

Source




Export restrictions placed on Canada by U.S. drug companies are working: "Canada intends to ban the bulk of export prescriptions to the United States and other countries to try to control Internet pharmacies, the health minister said Tuesday. Health Minister Ujjal Dosanjh said he must ensure Canadians continue to have access to an adequate supply of safe and affordable prescription drugs and would launch initiatives, including legislative and regulatory changes, to protect the supply and safety of Canada's drugs. Sales of the drugs have become popular with Americans seeking cheaper medicine. President Bush's administration opposes the prescription drug imports, and federal regulators warn they cannot guarantee the safety of drugs from outside U.S. borders. But Canada has dismissed concerns about the safety of drugs sold in Canada, saying Canada's regulatory regime was tougher than the U.S. one."

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For greatest efficiency, lowest cost and maximum choice, ALL hospitals and health insurance schemes should be privately owned and run -- with government-paid vouchers for the very poor and minimal regulation.

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