Sharesmagazine
 Home   Log In   Register   Our Services   My Account   Contact   Help 
 Stockwatch   Level 2   Portfolio   Charts   Share Price   Awards   Market Scan   Videos   Broker Notes   Director Deals   Traders' Room 
 Funds   Trades   Terminal   Alerts   Heatmaps   News   Indices   Forward Diary   Forex Prices   Shares Magazine   Investors' Room 
 CFDs   Shares   SIPPs   ISAs   Forex   ETFs   Comparison Tables   Spread Betting 
You are NOT currently logged in
 
Register now or login to post to this thread.

THE TALK TO YOURSELF THREAD. (NOWT)     

goldfinger - 09 Jun 2005 12:25

Thought Id start this one going because its rather dead on this board at the moment and I suppose all my usual muckers are either at the Stella tennis event watching Dim Tim (lose again) or at Henly Regatta eating cucumber sandwiches (they wish,...NOT).

Anyway please feel free to just talk to yourself blast away and let it go on any company or subject you wish. Just wish Id thought of this one before.

cheers GF.

Haystack - 26 Mar 2015 10:36 - 57955 of 81564

A poll has shown that support for capital punishment has fallen below 50% for the first time.

Haystack - 26 Mar 2015 10:38 - 57956 of 81564

The report by the Kings Fund saying that the NHS has fallen to 1990s level also said that it had done as well as could be expected in the financial climate.

cynic - 26 Mar 2015 10:40 - 57957 of 81564

fred - Bed blocking by patients with alzheimers, etc. who have nowhere else to go except to stay in their hospital bed. This cost needs to be transferred over to the social services side of things.

that has to be one of the more stupid comments you have made recently

who foots the bill for social services?
the taxpayer

who foots the bill for NHS?
the taxpayer

all you are suggesting is robbing peter to pay paul

============

however, it may be that there could be greater collaboration between local residential care homes with spare beds and the hospitals who have beds blocked by cases who just need a few extra days with some care to hand until the patient's needs can be met at home or similar

Haystack - 26 Mar 2015 10:41 - 57958 of 81564

When the pilot came out of the cockpit, a member of cabin crew is supposed to replace him until he comes back. It looks like the protocol was not followed.

Haystack - 26 Mar 2015 10:44 - 57959 of 81564

It could be that the pilot in the cockpit was dealing with the the emergency and could not open the door.

Fred1new - 26 Mar 2015 10:50 - 57960 of 81564

Jimmy,

I don't have to label you, you doing a good job for yourself.


Check the percentage of "workers" from overseas in the health and Welfares services
against their usage of the services.


When you pay NHI and Tax you are insuring yourself, offspring and others.

Mind, I think those who develop a new form of Ebola in London should not be treated unless they have insurance to cover the cost.

Soon sort out the population problems of London.

Natural wastage!

I am not going to pay my taxes for the benefit of others.

I never use the roads in London, again I don't think I should pay my taxes for the benefit of others.

Likewise those bloody schools. I don't have any kids, why should I pay tax for them.

Fred1new - 26 Mar 2015 10:50 - 57961 of 81564

.

Haystack - 26 Mar 2015 11:08 - 57962 of 81564

More voters believe taxes will rise under Labour

https://yougov.co.uk/news/2015/03/26/more-voters-believe-taxes-will-rise-under-labour/

Fred1new - 26 Mar 2015 11:31 - 57963 of 81564

Wouldn't be surprised.

Why don't you leave the country now?

ExecLine - 26 Mar 2015 11:37 - 57964 of 81564

cynic:

You say

fred - Bed blocking by patients with alzheimers, etc. who have nowhere else to go except to stay in their hospital bed. This cost needs to be transferred over to the social services side of things.

that has to be one of the more stupid comments you have made recently

That was MY comment, not Fred's.

I don't want to fall out with you but I think your comment on this is actually quite bloody ridiculous!

I'll forgive you your attacking comment , which should actually have been directed towards me and not Fred, if you would kindly care to explain:

1. Why you think it is perfectly acceptable to have bed blocking patients with alzheimers and the like, blocking beds in NHS hospitals.

2. Why should the cost fall on the NHS and not on the local councils who should be providing proper fundinmg and accommodation for these people.

3. And yes, it is a case of robbing Peter to pay Paul - but if the problem were properly managed and properly catered for, then at least the NHS hospital bed patients in A&E would get lower length waiting times for their hospital beds, the nurses would be freed uip to do a better nursing job for the ward patients, the alzheimer patients wouldn't need to stay in bed all day, blocking beds for other more needy accident cases and the like.

4. Problems need solutions which have been properly thought out and budgeted for in a more correct and professional manner.

Damn it! Need I go on with this?

EDIT: I will go on with it a bit.

From today's local paper: (Northampton Chronicle)
07:25 Thursday 26 March 2015

The chief executive of Northampton General Hospital has issued a call for urgent action on bed blocking because 110 fit patients are unable to leave its wards.

Although she stresses that delayed discharges are as much NGH’s responsibility as the wider NHS and the county council, Dr Sonia Swart said all parts of the health system were not acting with as much urgency as the county’s hospitals.

She said: “Collectively, we are not meeting the needs of the patients we serve.

“We had more than a hundred delayed discharge patients last week – three-and-a-half wards worth – and, more importantly, the numbers have not been going down.

“Things were agreed last summer to bring them down and we have just had eight weeks of the worst consistent pressure we’ve ever had.

“We were genuinely worried that if this continued it would pose a risk to patients. This is a call to action.”

Dr Swart said that with wards frequently operating a virtual one-in-one out policy, staff wanted to leave and patients were being left without a bed.

She said: “You wouldn’t want a patient with a heart attack, a stroke or major bleed to come to a hospital that is so full they can’t get a bed straight away in the right department​ and that’s what’s happening.

“It’s not what we would want for our families and its not what I’d want for our patients in this hospital and it is having a huge impact on our staff. Staff who are working when we are so pressured are genuinely worried about patients. They haven’t got the time they’d like to explain things to people.

“That makes me feel like this can’t continue.”

Last week, there were 165 fit patients at NGH and KGH who could not be discharged.

Often it’s because elderly people with complex illnesses need home care assessments by social services, which can take days and weeks.

As a result, doctors cannot be sure the patient would be safe at home and so keep them in hospital, stopping new patients being admitted.

Effects of this include long queues in A&E, ambulance response delays, cancelled operations and patients being moved wards in the middle of the night. The nub of the issue is that the pressure is all on hospitals to get patients admitted quickly to hit targets, but there is no similar imperative to get them out quickly when they are better.

One of the major changes, since March, has been to put NHS Northamptonshire Healthcare in sole charge of complex discharges, although it is too early for any positive effects to emerge.

Given the progress,​ though,​ why did NGH and KGH decide to release a letter criticising the county’s discharge system?

Dr Swart said: “I’ve raised this on about 30 occasions in meetings in the last three years. You might see it as unhelpful but it is formally stating to our partners that we have an unacceptable level of risk, which we need to resolve.

“If I hadn’t raised this publicly I might as well ​h​ave sent a letter. What’s the point of writing a letter, they’d put it in a drawer?

“We had 8 weeks of the worst consistent pressure we’ve ever had. We were genuinely worried that if this continued it would pose a risk to patients. This is why we did this.

“If you look at the reports on Morecambe Bay, people were covering things up. We think the public have a right to know what is happening.”

Although actions have been put in place before and since the letter, NGH board members’ worry for staff and patients persists.

Dr Swart said: “It will be a worry until we reduce the pressure in the system so that everyone can go straight to the right bed at any time.

“We are managing our risks as carefully as we can but we were drawing attention to the fact this can’t go on.”

Haystack - 26 Mar 2015 11:47 - 57965 of 81564

It is fortunate that Cameron will be the next PM.

I see that UKIP and the Greens are getting squeezed.

Haystack - 26 Mar 2015 11:51 - 57966 of 81564

http://ukpollingreport.co.uk/blog/archives/9304Are UKIP and the Greens getting squeezed?

required field - 26 Mar 2015 11:51 - 57967 of 81564

Don't tell me the pilots don't have an emergency override that means they cannot open the door in emergency...surely it would be normal that the pilots should have a password that enables them only to open the door from the outside.....

Stan - 26 Mar 2015 11:55 - 57968 of 81564

H/S emigrating? Let me help you decide http://www.emigrate.co.uk/emigration-guides/item-472/top-six-places-to-emigrate

required field - 26 Mar 2015 12:11 - 57969 of 81564

Copilot at fault it seems.....

required field - 26 Mar 2015 12:14 - 57970 of 81564

Baader-Meinof ?

ExecLine - 26 Mar 2015 12:33 - 57971 of 81564

Apparently the two pilot guys 'had words'.

No names have yet been released and so there is no 'name indication' that a pilot who might have been an islamic extremist was involved.

cynic - 26 Mar 2015 13:20 - 57972 of 81564

EL - just back from the gym ......
alzheimer's, especially in its latter stages, is hugely difficult to cope with at home for all sorts of very good reasons ..... and for the purpose of the exercise, we'll say dementia and alzheimer's are synonymous

i also suspect that most (all?) residential care homes do not have the necessary specialist staff to cope with this

your idea of robbing peter to pay paul could just as easily be labelled as passing the buck and, even if it was feasible which i personally doubt per above, i cannot see that it would actually save money or resources

however, as i suggested at the outset, collaboration between residential care homes and hospitals is worth exploring as a way of freeing hospital beds by moving those patients for the extra few days required while their "home circumstances" are organised

Fred1new - 26 Mar 2015 13:48 - 57973 of 81564

Manuel.

What about my feelings you have hurt?

Stan - 26 Mar 2015 14:01 - 57974 of 81564

...Yeah and me.
Register now or login to post to this thread.