That’s not devolved system care though buddy, that’s just shit. There are only really two devolved health systems in England and they are at the ICS level: Manchester and one other.Wreckless Rat wrote: ↑Sat Jan 02, 2021 11:12 am @docca - imho some of the NHS’ existing problems comes from devolution. Ie one trust does X another does Y and another does V. The idea of letting each trust go each own way would scare the shit out of me. I already see enough variation in systems owing to trust differences. If we take one area I know well call and dispatch for 9’s.
Each trust does its own thing, they all buy independently, and then all bespoke the systems... this has a whole raft of implications, from huge overbearing costs, to interoperability issues, right down to the inability to update to modern OS in a supported manner.
There is a current hot potato of security across NHS systems which is costing an absolute fortune, and each trust is going its own way to meet the criteria, most of which simply cannot be done, let alone in the timescales requested. Thus they are now about to blow a fortune with half measure and work arounds.
I’m not sure what the solution is,but I find it hard to see more devotional is the answer. What it takes to jab someone in Norwich is no different to what it takes to jab someone in London....
All the nonsense that gets mandated from NHS England? The standards that you have to adhere to that cannot be universally applied but you still struggle to make things work ( hitting the target, missing the point) - that’s what you walk away from. You set your own metronome.
With the creation of Primary care networks and the aforementioned integrated care systems it becomes unnecessarily complicated, add to the mix integrated care partnerships and local health care record systems and it’s a stupid mess.
NHS cannot in good faith understand the complexities of all the complex care setups we have in this country, so as soon as more and more Trusts walk away from their grip, the better.
When people refer to ‘middle management’ or NHS management being shit in the NHS, it’s almost certainly because you have jobsworths that don’t want to rock the board-boat and by the time they get into senior roles, they’ve already been indoctrinated.
As for the NHS having blood on their hands if they fail to deliver; as usual, the layers are more complex than empty grandstand statements. The logistics of getting vaccines to where they need to be, including cold store where appropriate etc.
One of the biggest hurdles however will be ensuring you are giving the vaccine to the right person. It is by no means as straightforward as you think. It starts with making sure your contact details are up to date because your details will be pulled from the national SPINE in most cases. That pulls data from your GP system and if your address is different, or your phone number ...then you could miss out.
Then there is ensuring you’ve kept account of who has had what. You could argue that we’d just use the NHS number as the unique identifier and cross match against some otter details - but not everyone has an NHS number. Then there are those with known-as names and so on.
If I were to take one tip away to prepare it would be to check your GP details are correct. You can likely do this online.