DefTrap wrote: ↑Thu Dec 02, 2021 2:40 pm
gremlin wrote: ↑Thu Dec 02, 2021 1:57 pm
Tried to see a UK doctor lately?
Nah,
Has that particular aspect become worse then? Or is it as cumbersome as it ever was? (anecdotally I never used to bother much with UK docs appointments because by the time I got my appointment I thought I had a decent chance of getting better)
Should we be giving them some slack because of covid?
We got a new health centre about 4 years ago (contracted out to a health company, it serves/served a wide area of villages and is sited in the biggest) it was excellent. 8 GPs, nurse etc. Minor issues, phone up, see the nurse. If they had any doubts they'd get a second opinion from a doc. I pitched up with something of an emergency (sort of drowning in my own blood type of thing) - whoosh....test, test, letter, get yourself off to the Hosp and give 'em this. Hospital people were
as they were for my knee op. Wife had an arrhythmia issue...much testing and follow up etc etc. You used to be able to go on-line, check which doctor specialised in what and make an appt with them.
Covid arrives, doors slam, can't even get a phone conversation with a locum. Well, I got a phone appointment which they cancelled on the day by text and grudgingly offered another in 2 weeks when
I phoned
them and got through eventually. I took a look at the doctors' car parking spaces - all conveniently labelled with their names. Mostly empty. Working from home or gone jabbin'. So sure, Covid has something to do with it.
The only time the doors were open they were flu jabbin'....2 days, 2000 people, probably £30k...kerrching.
Currently their trade union, the BMA, are in negotiation with the Government about them helping with more jabbin' at £15-20 a pop (more on Sundays). BMA says they need to free up time by dropping the service to routinely monitor vulnerable patients (for which they are, of course, paid extra and which they may or may not actually be doing at the local health centre anyway) and Government must drop their demand that they offer face-to-face appointments if requested. Government are reluctant to do this because of the rising tide of anger in the population and the 'optics' aren't good.
Government promised more GPs and numbers appear to rise a bit...completely outweighed in terms of full time equivalents, because so many have gone part time (probably making enough from all the extra £s).
Between the Government, the BMA and the health companies they've broken it
and most of the problems were seeded when they had to drop their pants and bend over in order to get the medics on board with setting up the NHS.
There are quite a few private GP clinics around but it irks to be effectively forced to use them.
Some good GPs must be in despair at the collateral flak they're getting and it appears some of them are retiring because of it, again reducing the increase.
Meanwhile A&E is carrying the can.
It seems the same is true at most health centres, but not all, in this area. Some are still providing a good service, so it seems it's down to the contracted company and their GPs.
Like I say, it sucks. Particularly when a trained chimp could stick a needle in an arm given half a day training. Even I could do it
(and use the IT system).