access to junior doctors is protected by e.g. referrals by GPs.It's not a major point.
Quote from: monkoffunk on May 07, 2016, 06:59:01 amQuote from: Lund on May 06, 2016, 01:47:05 pmIsn't that about GPs and A&E - not "elective" junior doctor type stuff?What does this mean? Quite a confusing statement!GCW was talking about a paper showing that increased availability of A&E and GP meant increased load - i.e. more people. I was contending that the paper wasn't obviously relevant to the junior doctor, elective stuff discussion - because you can't just rock up to get an elective procedure: access to junior doctors is protected by e.g. referrals by GPs.It's not a major point.
Quote from: Lund on May 06, 2016, 01:47:05 pmIsn't that about GPs and A&E - not "elective" junior doctor type stuff?What does this mean? Quite a confusing statement!
Isn't that about GPs and A&E - not "elective" junior doctor type stuff?
In a highly critical report on NHS staffing levels, the influential Public Accounts Committee found that pressure on hospitals to save money was already leading to shortfalls on wards, and called for an urgent review of the size of the clinical workforce in England.
The BMA is clear that patients should have access to the same high quality of care, seven days a week, but if the Government wants more seven-day services, then it must finally answer the question asked by doctors, senior NHS leaders, medical royal colleges and now the Public Accounts Committee: how will it staff and fund them?
There are 300 vacancies for F1 training posts in England this year after they were oversubscribed in 2014 and 2015, which doctors’ leaders have blamed on the ongoing dispute over the junior doctor contracts. Health Education England is advertising 300 places for Foundation Year training beginning in July, which were unfilled by graduates from English medical schools.
It just gets more ridiculous!!Jeremy Hunt states juniors contract should be imposed due to weekend effect.Studies published in Journal of Health Services Research and Policy and two in the Lancet suggest weekend effect is a fallacy.
Fairly balanced editorial here
There is a real argument for improving the weekend service, but at a cash-strapped time when beneficial treatments are rationed, there is also an obligation to ask whether this is the best use of scarce resources.
It's more the tone of the debate on here that riles me.
I'm interested in the 7 day elective care.Slackers - you can get your car fixed on Saturday, stock up on the week's supplies on Sunday, watch a film, relax with a pint in the pub, catch a plane or a train, go and do all sorts of activities on a weekend. Why the fuck shouldn't you, in principle, be able to sort out non-emergency healthcare issues on a weekend? Of all the things it's possible to do on a weekend this would be the one that gives the greatest increase in quality of life for the general population who pay for their health service. But you don't think this is something worth aspiring to?Other professionals such as lawyers, architects, engineers generally don't offer weekend service (or if they do it prohibitively expensive) and that's fine, they aren't central to one of the most important parts of quality of life - health. We don't have a national lawyer service or a national architect service.Why isn't there 7 day elective care? Because it's too expensive... (or there isn't enough money, slightly different). Why is it too expensive?
Last Friday you wrote...Quote from: petejh on May 06, 2016, 03:14:23 pmI'm interested in the 7 day elective care.Slackers - you can get your car fixed on Saturday, stock up on the week's supplies on Sunday, watch a film, relax with a pint in the pub, catch a plane or a train, go and do all sorts of activities on a weekend. Why the fuck shouldn't you, in principle, be able to sort out non-emergency healthcare issues on a weekend? Of all the things it's possible to do on a weekend this would be the one that gives the greatest increase in quality of life for the general population who pay for their health service. But you don't think this is something worth aspiring to?Other professionals such as lawyers, architects, engineers generally don't offer weekend service (or if they do it prohibitively expensive) and that's fine, they aren't central to one of the most important parts of quality of life - health. We don't have a national lawyer service or a national architect service.Why isn't there 7 day elective care? Because it's too expensive... (or there isn't enough money, slightly different). Why is it too expensive?...which suggested very strongly to me that you would like to see seven day healthcare (emergency and elective), even if you already know why it doesn't currently exist (I suggested this could be addressed by either going private* as you do for all the other weekend activities you listed or increasing taxes to cover the increased cost to the NHS).I don't understand why or how being able to undergo elective treatment at the weekend would improve quality of life?Having the treatment, regardless of when, improves quality of life. There are laws governing sick-pay and so forth such that should you need to undergo treatment during the week and have to take time off from work your employers can not financially penalise you (this may not be so straight-forward for those who are self-employed, but presumably they put money by for such rainy days?).
I'm not holding out for anything. It's more the tone of the debate on here that riles me.
A lot of people would benefit from 8-8 availability and weekend availability because taking time off work isn't as easy as it is for your public sector job.
Footwork - Dont feed the mirror ffs....
I'm self-employed, I have been since 2002. I think you'll find there are lots of self-employed people who aren't well equipped for long rainy periods. In 2013 I paid ten thousand pounds on my health, on credit cards. Anf then missed 6 weeks of work, unpaid. How I wish I'd paid a less significant (but still significant) annual premium on health care and sickness cover. It isn't cheap though - I was being tight by not wanting to pay £800 per year for good health and wages cover. Many just don't have the means.
People like you are focused (to the nth degree..) on the letter of the law and how things should be. The world isn't like that.
A lot of people would benefit from 8-8 availability and weekend availability because taking time off work isn't as easy
your public sector job.
A lot of people would benefit from 8-8 availability and weekend availability
P.S. GCW although you clearly have a clear opinion, I don't think that means you should stop posting. It's never personal is it?
The sad thing is, I've had enough of all of this stuff and no longer really care. I half want it all to fall apart so people may appreciate what they used to have and abuse.
Quote from: petejh on May 11, 2016, 10:25:40 amI'm not holding out for anything. It's more the tone of the debate on here that riles me.What do you mean? People are passionate about it as a national institution, that people feel very strongly about, is falling apart and instead of fixing it, the government are pushing forward with an ill-defined manifesto promise (I still don't know what a 7 Day NHS is, the last comment I heard for the Health Secretary was that it wasn't about 7-day elective care so I'm at a loss as what the difference is to the service provided now).There appears to be no clarity (or even debate) about the intended outcome of having junior doctors contract changed so that makes people worried.
Slackline is foaming at the mouth,
I would much prefer it Slackers if you'd take your simplistic link-ridden posting off to a different topic as it's doing my head in.
I don't know what planet you're on, but it's not one of empathy, understanding, and compromise. Stop slagging off other people's life choices for fuck's sake. It's hardly immoral to want a public-funded seven-day healthcare service.
The only thing I don't get is who is going to do the work once it all falls apart shortly.
For instance I can't help but find hypocritical the stance of some doctors who keep stating the NHS is underfunded (true) when I hear about the sky-high sums of money wasted every quarter paying doctors working for agencies that charge the NHS the earth