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The end of the NHS. (Read 222082 times)

tomtom

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#750 Re: The end of the NHS.
May 11, 2016, 12:49:44 pm
It's very lopsided.

You mean bias not tone then....

galpinos

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#751 Re: The end of the NHS.
May 11, 2016, 12:50:36 pm
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. It took the government to impose caps on agency fees; on the face of it (to a layman like me) the BMA, doctors and the people arguing about the NHS being underfunded didn't seem that proactive in reducing huge agency costs for their services. Underfunding? What about overspending?

The funding model for the NHS is a bit bonkers and very convoluted. I've no idea how locum fees get set. My experience is limited as my wife works in a specialist hospital that struggles to get locums as few people have the relevant qualifications. My wife has done several locum shift but has never billed the hospital for them as she just sees it a covering when necessary. If fact, she is one of seven doctors working a ten person rota so they have to split the other three persons worth of work across the seven.

Presumably there is some personal choice involved in working for agencies that charge the NHS the earth Slackers? Not to mention ethics morals and ideals?

The doctors who are perpetual locums are often those which have failed to get a training post (the path to a Consultant position)

The doctors contract debate can be viewed through different shades of optimism to pessimism, cynicism etc. In less cynical moments I can see how it could be attempting to impose some much needed cost control on a powerful group of expensive people. Quite naturally they don't like this. I don't fully buy the govs argument nor the BMA's. Clearly there's a power struggle, it doesn't strike me as all about patient safety.

There has already been some cost control imposed. My wife was the first year of the most recent contract and was on £12k less than those who had started the ST post a year before her, doing the same job. Though in absolute monetary terms they are expensive, they are not on a cost per hour basis.

Regarding the BMA, lots of doctors aren't 100% behind them but have no other place to turn to get a cohesive "single voice" to get their points across. Unfortunately, I don't think the BMA have made a good job of getting the point across to the general public.

galpinos

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#752 Re: The end of the NHS.
May 11, 2016, 12:54:28 pm
Presumably a 'properly-funded' NHS would be able to fill these positions from it's own resources and not require agencies. There is obviously a long history of the private sector profiteering from NHS contracts, so the answer would seem to be reduce their involvement? Cost overall would be higher but the standard of service should be better value.

In theory yes, but there are some specialties that struggle to recruit (and will the financial incentives being reduced, will undoubtedly find it even harder) so have to fill the spots with locums. With the most recent intake of F1s (the most junior of junior doctors) being down and not all positions taken (they have previously be over-subscribed), there will be a requirement to fill the gaps with locums.

petejh

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#753 Re: The end of the NHS.
May 11, 2016, 01:00:44 pm
Presumably a 'properly-funded' NHS would be able to fill these positions from it's own resources and not require agencies. There is obviously a long history of the private sector profiteering from NHS contracts, so the answer would seem to be reduce their involvement? Cost overall would be higher but the standard of service should be better value.

Reduce agency involvement and impose fee caps on agencies. Or use own resources provided they compare well cost-wise..

Either way if overheads are too high they need controlling. You could also do that by trying to make the public - a pretty unhealthy expensive public - to be healthier of course!

tomtom

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#754 Re: The end of the NHS.
May 11, 2016, 01:22:18 pm
Presumably a 'properly-funded' NHS would be able to fill these positions from it's own resources and not require agencies. There is obviously a long history of the private sector profiteering from NHS contracts, so the answer would seem to be reduce their involvement? Cost overall would be higher but the standard of service should be better value.

Reduce agency involvement and impose fee caps on agencies. Or use own resources provided they compare well cost-wise..


Why do you think they've not done that Pete?

petejh

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#755 Re: The end of the NHS.
May 11, 2016, 01:32:26 pm
I think 'they', the dreaded they, have imposed fee caps on expensive agencies haven't they?

monkoffunk

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#756 Re: The end of the NHS.
May 11, 2016, 01:35:56 pm
Quote
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

Presumably a 'properly-funded' NHS would be able to fill these positions from it's own resources and not require agencies. There is obviously a long history of the private sector profiteering from NHS contracts, so the answer would seem to be reduce their involvement? Cost overall would be higher but the standard of service should be better value.


Absolutely true. I know that cost cutting maneuvers in Bristol have lead to nurses being employed at the bare minimum to fill rotas. They take sick leave or quit (often due to poor treatment or better conditions in the private sector) and the gaps are filled with agency staff at high rates. Same is true of doctors.

And by the way they aren't asking for sky high rates, its just that the going rate, i.e. the value that say a senior registrar (a kind of junior doctor) has to the running of hospitals, is significantly higher than then the amount that doctors working training posts are actually paid. Also pales into comparison compared to the operational costs of the NHS. Some patients can require figures upwards of £100,000 individually per year as a conservative estimate, as one small example.

petejh

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#757 Re: The end of the NHS.
May 11, 2016, 01:54:59 pm
And by the way they aren't asking for sky high rates, its just that the going rate, i.e. the value that say a senior registrar (a kind of junior doctor) has to the running of hospitals, is significantly higher than then the amount that doctors working training posts are actually paid

Really - including the profiteering middlemen agency's cut?
By definition isn't the 'going rate' for NHS staff what the NHS is prepared to pay them? The going rate for agency staff is what the NHS pays the profiteering middlemen agency.

Johnny Brown

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#758 Re: The end of the NHS.
May 11, 2016, 02:52:45 pm
Well, no, it's what they have to pay in a competitive market to get staff of the required expertise and experience. Just like any other job.

tomtom

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#759 Re: The end of the NHS.
May 11, 2016, 02:54:15 pm
And by the way they aren't asking for sky high rates, its just that the going rate, i.e. the value that say a senior registrar (a kind of junior doctor) has to the running of hospitals, is significantly higher than then the amount that doctors working training posts are actually paid

Really - including the profiteering middlemen agency's cut?
By definition isn't the 'going rate' for NHS staff what the NHS is prepared to pay them? The going rate for agency staff is what the NHS pays the profiteering middlemen agency.

Thats really just another form of outsourcing... as already happens with the cleaning, car parking, maintenance, buildings (PFI), catering, transport, care services etc... As I mentioned X posts ago look for the number of G4S or SERCO badges, uniforms, notices around in your local hospital...

petejh

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#760 Re: The end of the NHS.
May 11, 2016, 05:10:29 pm
Well, no, it's what they have to pay in a competitive market to get staff of the required expertise and experience. Just like any other job.

Except the government has powers to impose fee caps.

monkoffunk

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#761 Re: The end of the NHS.
May 11, 2016, 05:12:34 pm
Its supply and demand. Doctors want these training jobs and will work long hours, weekends and nights for less pay than they perhaps deserve (debatable) so as to have this training and career progression. Once you have a night shift without a medical registrar on call the dynamic changes. No one wants to work that shift as a one off. But if you don't cover it with registrar or higher then there would be a substantial risk of harm or death to patients. Therefore the value of a registrar is suddenly huge. The hospital simply has to cover that shift.

monkoffunk

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#762 Re: The end of the NHS.
May 11, 2016, 05:13:32 pm
Except the government has powers to impose fee caps.

There is a policy doomed to failure. If they don't pay people to do the job then they won't.

slackline

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#763 Re: The end of the NHS.
May 13, 2016, 08:25:46 pm
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.

This.

You two couldn't be further off the mark if you tried.

Its precisely because I have "empathy, understanding and compromise" that I think the current proposals for seven-day services are dangerous.  They are dangerous because there is zero additional money being provided to cover the expansion in service provision, which is dangerous in the short-term for immediate patient safety and long-term because of the potential demise of free-at-the-point of contact medical care regardless of your financial means to pay for it (i.e. the demise of the NHS as it was originally conceived).

  • The NHS is currently, with a five-day service, under-funded and many sectors rely on the good will of staff to work extra hours.
  • It is facing a staffing crisis because conditions have deteriorated and the people who work there are increasingly leaving as they've had enough.
  • It is expected to save somewhere in the region of £22 billion in 'efficiency savings'.

I never once said it was immoral to want a publicly funded seven day service, in fact I agreed, and wrote that it is a worthy goal.  But living in the real world (understanding and compromise) I realise that it is not achievable without additional funding.  Pete you have mentioned that the NHS employs expensive agency staff, but aside from the valid reason JB gave, have you paused to consider why?  Its because they're sick of the shit working conditions (longer and longer hours, and more and more bureaucracy), but they can actually do the job they want rather than paper work for less hassle by working for an agency.  What you describe is a symptom of the drive to run the NHS into the ground, not a cause of it.

You both seem to have completely missed the human aspect of the health service, the staff working there are humans, they have wants, families and lives outside of work.  But no, lets not show empathy, understanding and compromise towards those people, lets bang our single-issue drum whilst missing the bigger picture and continue to rant that "I want to have my health seen to at my convenience", and push these people to breaking point such that they quit the profession and more work is out-sourced to agencies.

Pointing out that something was a choice is not the same as slagging off that choice....

@Lund : You don't seem to have liked my "Deal with it" comment and think I lack empathy, understanding and compromise as a consequence.  Well I, and everyone else I know who have kids, do whatever they can to care for and bring their children up as best they can.  Work is important, but if my child is ill and needs my attention, or my wife is ill and can't do her share of caring then, as important as work is, the child takes priority.  So you have my empathy and understanding with regards to taking time off work in light of having children because I do it too.  But you sound like a child yourself whining that they want something NOW when you go on about how its inconvenient for you not to have access to your health service at the weekends and as a consequence have to take time off of work.

@petejh : You don't seem to have taken kindly to the fact I said that its individual choice to be self-employed and went on to say there are lots of self-employed people who aren't well equipped for long rainy periods, but that you splashed out £10k on credit to have your health problem dealt with privately but that with hindsight you regretted not taking insurance, and went on to point out that not everyone can afford insurance up front.  Well those people who aren't well equipped for long rainy periods will, under the current system, at least have their health taken care of free of charge but currently I, and many others who are capable of forming our own opinions rather than listening to spin, believe that to be under threat.  It would be a travesty if we moved away from the current system because firstly healthcare is expensive, secondly it would increase in cost (companies have to turn a profit, look at costs in the US), thirdly the inequality that exists would mean that many simply can't afford it.  So you and every other self-employed person out there also have my empathy and understanding because I want to see the NHS continue in its current form and not discriminate against you and others worse off than you.

I know a few medics (a climbing partner whos a clinical psychologist and two GPs through friends), there are GCW, monkoffunk, webbo and other doctors posting in this thread, all of whom have insight into an increasingly broken system giving their opinion, which yes, might be biased, but its because they no doubt feel as I do, that the NHS in its current form is worth saving.  The compromise is that because you can't have a seven day service without more money you have to stick with the current five-day service until more money comes along.  Neither of you have seriously addressed how a seven day service would be funded, instead sticking to "how you think things should be" (an accusation you levelled at me Pete).


All that said, I'm done with discussing anything serious on this forum.  You've both employed a classic Sloper tactic of being myopic and purposefully ignoring the larger picture and consequences of various courses of action (you even stated this was your aim at the outset Lund, kind of like a declaration of trolling) yet big issues like this and many others simply can not be boiled down to a single issue as you have both attempted to do, and I can't be bothered wasting time having such discussions. 

@Lund Nor do I have any time for you or the vitriol you have directed towards me.  You are a hypocrite to complain that my posts are "link ridden" as you do exactly the same, further back posting right after me and asking me what I made of a paper and linking to it.  I took the time to read it and comment on it (the effect size was tiny) and provided you with a means of reading it in full yourself, but you chose to ignore that, and simply posted a link to another paper that supported your view point a few posts later. 

P.S. Pete - Its perfectly natural that differences of opinion on a piece of work arise (viz. your comment about "Prof xyz of medical institution abc" being contradicted by "professor efg of medical institution jkl").   That is science.  You do a piece of work, put it out there and others review it,  criticise it and then improve on it.  Go to conferences and at the end of almost every talk when questions are asked you can almost guarantee someone will ask "Did you consider the impact of A, B and C?".  Thats how science progresses and we can either take these at face value, read the methods and judge for ourselves the appropriateness of the methods employed and the conclusions that can be drawn or you can trust an expert (after checking who funded the work and whether there are any conflicts of interest) because these are the people who you should listen to, even if they disagree, eventually with more work a consensus will be reached.  The only people who quote statistics you shouldn't listen to are politicians who twist facts to whatever whim takes their fancy.  I always got the impression you understood this.

webbo

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#764 Re: The end of the NHS.
May 13, 2016, 08:37:31 pm
 :bow:

tomtom

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#765 Re: The end of the NHS.
May 13, 2016, 08:41:20 pm
Well said Slackline.

a dense loner

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#766 Re: The end of the NHS.
May 13, 2016, 09:59:25 pm
What did he say?

webbo

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#767 Re: The end of the NHS.
May 13, 2016, 10:14:59 pm
Don't fuck with me or the NHS.

Oldmanmatt

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#768 Re: The end of the NHS.
May 13, 2016, 10:28:08 pm
Well said Slackline.

+1

Wrote something almost witty, then deleted it all.

This shit ain't funny.

Will Hunt

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#769 Re: The end of the NHS.
May 15, 2016, 08:27:00 am
A tour de force of reasoning.

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#770 Re: The end of the NHS.
May 15, 2016, 09:37:13 am
Comes across more as frustration based rant to me.  I want slackers to continue discussing, links n all. The situation with the NHS is horribly complex and buried under masses of spin, so its understandable some people don't get it at all let alone most in detail. If we want to keep the NHS its important to keep up our side of the information war and stay honest in this.

Oldmanmatt

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#771 Re: The end of the NHS.
May 17, 2016, 02:16:51 pm
This has been reported on the BBC site, but I've gone with a more reliable source.

 http://newsthump.com/2016/05/17/trained-chimps-should-fill-in-for-doctors-say-nhs-bosses/


Sent from my iPhone using Tapatalk

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#772 Re: The end of the NHS.
May 19, 2016, 08:32:15 am
Channel 4 news last night had a good summary, JH under pressure (from 4:45) and a very mature interview with a Junior Doc.


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#773 Re: The end of the NHS.
May 19, 2016, 11:25:28 pm
Great post by slackline there, thanks for putting the effort in.

Regarding the 7 day NHS. They trialed 7 day at the fracture clinic my partner worked at and they couldn't fill the weekend appointments. Turns out people got better things to do at weekend! My understanding is other trials showed similar results. The problem being the main users of the NHS, the 10% who take up 90% of the costs can and want to go in the week. And the generally well people who want weekend services rarely have to utilise them as they are generally well.

If there was really a demand for routine services at the weekend then this would have been filled by the market cashing in on high demand.

monkoffunk

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#774 Re: The end of the NHS.
May 20, 2016, 12:45:25 pm
Slightly concerned that not rostering junior doctors two weekends in a row hasn't been thought through. I think it's a good thing, but not thought out. ED rotas you end up working up to three in a row. So trusts need to either employ more doctors or put less on at weekends. Without more funding they will do that latter. Paradoxically this contract might mean fewer doctors on ED at weekends. Further cracks in a broken system.

 

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