charlie007
Registered User
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Its unfair to blame people with underlying health conditions that might have killed or incapacitated them 20/30/40 years for supposedly being a drain on the health service.Part of the reasons for the strain today's health services are under is the expanding population of sick people. We are all living longer but generally unhealthier lives. In the 1980's, if you lead the lives that some people lead today, you'd simply die younger. Now, thanks to modern medicine, you are living longer but are adding to the strain of the health system. Then add in the cost of modern medicine.
Couple of factors:
80s (and pre-80s) telecoms technology was incredibly clunky and expensive by comparison with today's. It really did cost a lot more (in real terms) to provide the service.
Posts and Telegraphs was a monopoly service provider, and monopolists have no great incentive to improve efficiency. But also. . .
We hear a lot from whingers who have to wait ages in A&E, but the biggest reason for a long wait in A&E is that you’ve been triaged as not being that urgent a case. And one of the biggest issues is eejits showing up at A&E when they should be availing of other, simpler options.
But are they happy?I was reading an article about the coffin cubicles in Hong Kong this morning. Looking for the article, I came across an older one with better pictures of how bad they really are
https://www.theguardian.com/cities/...g-kong-coffin-cubicles-cage-homes-in-pictures
I was brought to Tallaght Hospital via Ambulance a few years ago with a suspected heart attack. The only person who spoke to me was a woman who asked in I had private insurance and if I would like to be treated as a private patient. After 14 hours I hadn't seen anyone and asked how much longer it would be before I was attended to. They said it would be at least another 12 hours so I had to assume that I wasn't ill and left. A few months later I received a call from a legal firm looking for money. I asked what for and they said it was for medical care in Tallaght Hospital. I replied that if anyone could provide me with any evidence of any medical care I receive I'd be happy to pay the charge. I received no further communication.When you get triaged in A&E, you might get sent back to sit on the benches and wait to be called, or if judged quite ill, sent straight in to a bed/cubicle/armchair/plastic chair to wait for the doctor. Either way the wait is very long, and you do not get updates on when you will be next moved to another stage in the journey (tests, see a doctor, porter moving you to some other location).
On my last visit to A&E with a sick relative, he was quickly judged very ill by the triage nurse, and while already in a wheel chair, wheeled in to wait for the doctor. I went in as well to look after basic needs. We waited over 12 hours before he got upgraded to an armchair, and just short of 24 before he was put on a trolley. During this time I was not allowed to sit, as the situation in A&E was so bad that only patients were permitted the plastic chairs. About every 40 minutes a nurse came by and asked anyone who wasn't a patient to stand up, and then she and a porter gathered up the chairs for sick people.
A&E is a serious place to be, and indeed many people might think of attending for care that could be delivered better elsewhere, but I'm willing to bet that anyone who's been through it once will try any other care path first before going in for a second go.
There's lots wrong with our A&E's and it has absolutely nothing to do with money or resources. Back in the 80's the hospitals were run by the Nuns and the nurses were terrified of them so they actually did what was required to ensure that patients were treated and the health service was run for the benefit of the patient, not the employees.
Back in the 80's the hospitals were run by the Nuns and the nurses were terrified of them so they actually did what was required to ensure that patients were treated and the health service was run for the benefit of the patient, not the employees.
They are generally caring, though I've encountered a small minority who would be better suited to being concentration camp guards, but there is massive structural waste and very inefficient work practices. The Nuns just wouldn't stand for that sort of thing.On the many occasions I've been thru A&E with relatives, at no point did I encounter nurses who were anything other than busy and caring. Indeed, all the staff I encountered were very caring and busy beyond belief. I did notice that there were very few doctors, and often no evidence of any at all. On a good few occasions, my relatives languished in A&E until shortly after 8am, when a new team would arrive, which seemed to include doctors. I got the distinct impression that the HSE doesn't have many doctors in A&E after hours.
1987 was our highest ratio ever. People spent way longer in hospital back then as well so it's really not a good indicator to use.A lot of factors have changed since the 80's so I am not sure that we can conclude that waiting times in A&E have deteriorated because nurses are no longer sufficiently terrified into providing a good service. Just one example: there were 9.13 hospital beds per 1,000 people in 1987 compared to 2.55 in 2022. And demographics have changed radically.
I don't know the statistics but I thing the chances of surviving a heart attack etc. have improved considerably in the interim. Well, up to a point - we all have to go at some stage!
I have several generations of civil servants in my family and they all got their jobs via competitive exam. Canvassing is taboo and people’s children are not looked after.Politicians, from councillors to TD's, got entire families jobs in the multitude of semis states and Government offices
I think the further away you got/get from the centre the more patronage there was/is.I have several generations of civil servants in my family and they all got their jobs via competitive exam. Canvassing is taboo and people’s children are not looked after.
Maybe local authorities are different.
I can assure you, from personal experience, that nepotism and knowing the right people to secure roles in local authorities is rife, as is still putting completely unqualified people in positions rather than on merit and creating jobs for the specific boy(s) - or girls! . Some day an expose will blow it all wide open or maybe it's so engrained within our institutions that no one would dare touch it. I appreciate (also from personal experience) that the civil service is considerably different, but despite the caveat on all forms, canvassing still unashamedly goes on. Equally with the demise of the the semi states (P&T, etc) in the 80's and their transformation into private companies, the opportunities for stroke politicians to "get ya in there" was lessened, but still not eliminated.I have several generations of civil servants in my family and they all got their jobs via competitive exam. Canvassing is taboo and people’s children are not looked after.
Maybe local authorities are different.
It’s amazing how the internet is full of pseudonymous stories like this. Yet no one ever appeals a failed promotion to the WRC or complains to AGS under the Criminal Justice (Corruption Offences) Act 2018.I can assure you, from personal experience, that nepotism and knowing the right people to secure roles in local authorities is rife, as is still putting completely unqualified people in positions rather than on merit and creating jobs for the specific boy(s) - or girls!
As someone who doesn't use a pseudonym here, I'll confine myself to recalling a comment from an old and now deceased friend about the people of the home parish of a well known government minister of the 1970s and 1980s:It’s amazing how the internet is full of pseudonymous stories like this. Yet no one ever appeals a failed promotion to the WRC or complains to AGS under the Criminal Justice (Corruption Offences) Act 2018.
The hard fact at the time that nobody made long distance (ie outside one's own county) personal calls except where absolutely necessary because they were totally unaffordable to almost all of the population) and the parallel fact that the phone exchanges were barely used at off-peak times (as evidenced by my dad and aunt's experience as outlined above) each suggest a spectacular pricing failure.You would be surprised.
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