Health Care Stories from England

The NHS Exposed

Patricia Balsom: Diary of my final days

How one cancer patient suffered at the hands of the NHS

Like most people, Janet Street-Porter had read about the problems engulfing the National Health Service. But it wasn’t until her sister was diagnosed with terminal cancer that she came face to face with the stark reality of our debt-ridden hospitals. And it is all spelt out in the diary that Patricia Balsom has kept as she seeks the care she so desperately needs.

NHS Sucks

Horrific Cancer Treatment

I wish to share with you the horrid tale of how my father-in-law, a very decent and courageous man, was treated by the NHS since his diagnosis with gastric cancer. The whole affair here in Northumberland was sordid and I feel that the NHS staff was about as useless, indifferent and uncaring as they could possibly have been. I have not seen such poor treatment before in my life, whether in Scandinavia, Canada, or the United States, all places that I have lived and worked.

My father-in-law has just passed away from complications associated with gastric cancer. His treatment was, from the outset, absolutely horrific–at first the doctors barely passed him any information, and when we discovered that the cancer was incurable, they did not even bother booking an appointment for palliative care. I had to get information on the cancer and why chemotherapy was not an option from physician friends abroad and also had to book in the palliative care appointments myself.

Naturally, we wanted a second opinion, but the oncologist would not send this off because she felt that this questioned her judgment ! The nurse on the gastric team even tried to dissuade my father-in-law from doing this, feeling it was a waste of time. I have never heard of a doctor not acceding to a request for a second opinion. Ultimately, the registrar at the surgery had to write the request for a second opinion. From my experience with physicians, it is commonplace and well-advised to get a second opinion whenever a serious medical matter is diagnosed. The reputation of the oncologist (Dr. Mulvenna) was obviously more important to her than a patient asking for a second opinion regarding treatment and options.

It took nearly three weeks for an appointment with the palliative care team to be made. He was having difficulty eating because the tumour had spread to the oesophagus, and it was decided that a stent was a good initial option. When this was procedure was performed, the staff only gave him a local anaesthetic and he felt great discomfort. When the stent did not have the desired effect and he experienced a reflux of food, it never occurred to anyone that perhaps they should try other drugs to help him digest and to administer them by syringe. He never received any drugs apart from those prescribed at the outset whereas the Macmillan nurse said that there were many alternate drugs available. Instead, they wasted time and did not show the slightest interest in the case. The bleeding of the tumours was not addressed either, and only one radiotherapy session was booked.

The palliative care doctors, moreover, never even thought of telling him that a doctor came to Alnwick where he lived. Instead, they expected him to travel nearly forty miles to the nearest major hospital in Wansbeck. Only the secretary mentioned that a palliative care doctor visited Alnwick once a week, but by then it was too late.

At the hospital in his last week, a gastric specialist came in an told him that he had only weeks or months to live. This was not an opinion asked for, and her motive for saying this was strictly so that he would sign a waiver that would not require the medical team to resuscitate him !

Perhaps the cancer could not be cured, but the NHS made my father-in-law’s last months much less comfortable than they could have been because they just did not care and saw him as a nuisance. They followed the guidelines and did the bare minimum for him, but the guidelines exist only to absolve the NHS from liability. The nurses, doctors, and everyone involved with the case did close to nothing and no one even thought of breaking ranks because they are too worried about their fucking jobs and pensions, and satisfying their political masters, than they are about people’s lives. We can blame the system, but the attitude of the cowardly and venal scum within the ranks of the NHS must change too, if this system should be allowed to continue. Obviously throwing money at them is not going to change anything.

Moreover, we live in a strange world where guidelines and edicts from HQ are regarded as being in the best interests of the patients. It is like something out of Kafka or Orwell: the edicts and guidelines and ‘best practise’ codes have nothing to do with the best treatment of patients. This is how the government and their sycophants hide their ineptitude. I have never heard so many weasel words uttered to excuse the fact that they left a decent man to die with almost no support. If that is ‘best practise’, they can go fuck themselves. My advice to any of you facing cancer in Newcastle and Northumberland is to keep away from the NHS Trust here and do not trust the oncologists and their support staff. Also, if you can, get a private insurance and go to the US because you are condemned to death in the British Isles and furthermore will be treated like an unreasonable imbecile if you complain and fed weasel words at the same time to excuse the medical staff for leaving you to die and giving you sub-standard treatment.

Woman gives birth on pavement ‘after being refused ambulance

I have experienced both U.K. and U.S. health care systems. I grew up in America and lived in Leicester from 1987 to 2004. The main difference is CHOICE. I had so many bad experiences in England that when my husband died, the first thing I did was book a one way ticket. The care he did NOT receive was the reason for his early demise. I was sooo happy to come back and make my choices as to the health care I wanted and/or needed. People in the U.S. who do not have health insurance have their priorities wrong. I have friends who go on vacations, buy new cars etc. and then complain about not having health insurance. The people of America are making their voices heard loud and clear on this issue. Canadians are flooding across the Great Lakes to get healthcare in the United States and are happy to pay the price.
Judith Smith, Georgia, U.S.A.

- judith smith, oakwood, Georgia, U.S.A., 18/8/2009 10:28

NHS did something similar to my mum. Because she was diagnosed with cancer, she did not “qualify” for an ambulance ride when she broker her hip. I guess they assumed she would die soon enough so this wouldn’t become a problem for them. Glad we took her to the States where the blessed doctors were able to give her 5 years more of life.

- Hugh Devonshire, Leeds, England, 18/8/2009 10:00

I think everyone here arguing about the pros and cons of an NHS type healthcare system versus a US privatised system are barking up the wrong tree. The main problem now in the UK is that the NHS has become a victim (like every other public service) of collapse due to the sheer numbers being allowed to use the system that haven’t paid into it. Obviously this has increased beyond all common sense during the the last twelve years and has resulted in hospitals in most inner city areas especially, simply being unable to cope. It has all sort of knock on effects that is costing a fortune; translation services, the bringing in of incompetent agency workers who have little loyalty to the organisation they are working for, import of foreign workers who are not always screened for correct qualifications or ability to communicate English effectively, mis-management of hygiene procedures etc etc. The NHS should be chargeable to all newcomers full stop.

- cae, London, 18/8/2009 9:33

Hang on Folks, aren’t we forgetting the most important issue….???

Human kindness….where has that all gone, can you imagine your baby about to be born and the hospital tells you to find your own way there. Why do we pay taxes,why do we contribute toward the NHS ?
The hospital service should be ashamed of themselves, Mrs Blake could have lost her baby, or even her own life.
Does nobody care any more,? are we so wrapped up in our opinions that no one looks at the bigger picture.
I guarantee you if it was a friend, or family member that this happened to, your stories would be totally different.

Ambulances are at the ready for any drunk delinquents that fall out of clubs in the early hours of the morning. Why should they get this treatment, where do they contribute toward society, most of them unemployed and not paying taxes.
This country is in a mess and should get their act and priorities together.

- Maggie Smith, Lincolinshire, 18/8/2009 8:29

The Price is Right

Representative Tim Price, a doctor for 25 years, talks in Congress about the Health Care Reform bill.

PAID UP, America’s Cost of Modern Slavery

August 12th is the national average for having paid your dept to the Government. Where I live, it was August 4th, whew what a break!

Click on the picture twice to see full sized.
Cost of Govt Graph

http://www.fiscalaccountability.org/userfiles/COGD2009_web.pdf

Oregon and the Future of the Your Health Care (as envisioned by Ezekiel Emanuel)

Palin is being called a kook for warning about Obama’s Death Panel. Don’t worry, I will bet that Ezekiel Emanuel, Rahm’s brother, will be looking out for you. EE, appointed to two key positions: health-policy adviser at the Office of Management and Budget and a member of Federal Council on Comparative Effectiveness Research.

Savings, he writes, will require changing how doctors think about their patients: Doctors take the Hippocratic Oath too seriously, “as an imperative to do everything for the patient regardless of the cost or effects on others” (Journal of the American Medical Association, June 18, 2008).

He explicitly defends discrimination against older patients: “Unlike allocation by sex or race, allocation by age is not invidious discrimination; every person lives through different life stages rather than being a single age. Even if 25-year-olds receive priority over 65-year-olds, everyone who is 65 years now was previously 25 years” (Lancet, Jan. 31).

More: http://www.nypost.com/seven/07242009/postopinion/opedcolumnists/deadly_doctors_180941.htm?&page=1

Some more of your future from Oregon.

From ABC News:

The news from Barbara Wagner’s doctor was bad, but the rejection letter from her insurance company was crushing.

The 64-year-old Oregon woman, whose lung cancer had been in remission, learned the disease had returned and would likely kill her. Her last hope was a $4,000-a-month drug that her doctor prescribed for her, but the insurance company refused to pay.

What the Oregon Health Plan did agree to cover, however, were drugs for a physician-assisted death. Those drugs would cost about $50.

“It was horrible,” Wagner told ABCNews.com. “I got a letter in the mail that basically said if you want to take the pills, we will help you get that from the doctor and we will stand there and watch you die. But we won’t give you the medication to live.”

More: http://abcnews.go.com/Health/story?id=5517492&page=1

No Guns for Negros

Here is a viewpoint you will not hear on the Main Stream Media.

Witness To ACORN Antics

I keep reading the comments on many videos and blogs and there are always those, from both sides, that cannot keep a civil tongue. The propaganda effort to discredit roughly 1/2 of the population has now reached the White House with the announcement to Democrats to “Punch back twice as hard.”, which has been taken literally by the SEIU and Acorn, both supporters of the President and can be considered, in his lap. Recently, with the White Houses blessing, SEIU and Acorn members have been bussed into the St. Louis town hall meeting from Chicago to “Punch back twice as hard.” as seen in the following videos.

One of the tactics of these union organizers is to claim assault where there is none.

What concerns me the most is that Acorn and SEIU are closely associated with the White House. White House and DNC tactics are taken directly out of Alinsky’s ‘Rules for Radicals’.

Rule 5: Ridicule is man’s most potent weapon. It’s hard to counterattack ridicule, and it infuriates the opposition, which then reacts to your advantage. (teabaggers, right wing loonies, etc.)

Rule 11: Pick the target, freeze it, personalize it, polarize it. Don’t try to attack abstract corporations or bureaucracies. Identify a responsible individual. Ignore attempts to shift or spread the blame. (Joe the Plumber, Palin, etc.)

Don’t get me wrong, both sides try to defeat the other with one kind of tactic or another, it is just that the intersection ideas of Alinsky, people closely associated with those ideas like Obama, and the close relationship of the White House, SEIU, and Acorn that should be a concern to all.

The Uprising

ocare

If you are concerned about the escalating tension at the recent town hall meetings, you should be. The longer these voices go unheard and ignored, the higher the possibility of actual violence will ensue. This is a loosing game for the proponents of a popular/unpopular move in Congress. Popular because almost everyone can agree that there needs to be some kind of change in health care, such as catastrophic insurance so one does not loose the farm going to the hospital, or portability of insurance. Unpopular because the thought of the Government taking over a much larger part of the economy and doing it well stretches credulity beyond the breaking point you are seeing.

First they ignore you, then they ridicule you, then they fight you, then you win. — Mahatma Gandhi

Jon Stewart on Healthcare

Last week’s Daily Show also featured a montage of the President refuting criticisms of his health care plan. After the string of presidential rebuttals Stewart concluded, “You know a sales pitch is in trouble when it starts with “Look, you’ve got to trust me. We’re not going to kill your grandparents.”

Pelosi: Town Hall Protesters Are “Carrying Swastikas”

Of course having no proof of such a thing does not stop her from making a fool of herself. Evidently, dissent is only acceptable if it is from the left. The following comment is a reflection of what people are feeling and what these politicians are turning a blind eye to. You would think their constituents should mean something to them.

Quote:
For most of my adult life I have heard over and over again the right wanted fascism but in my heart of heart I always knew it was the left that would gladly dispense with the Constitution in order to mold their brave new world. We’ve told ourselves for generations that it can’t happen here – but it is.

Very Progressive!

1984

CCTV cameras are now being installed in homes of what are deemed “antisocial” families in Great Britain. How long do you think it will be before our most caring Progressives will push for this in the US?

http://www.tomsguide.com/us/britain-cctv-homes-big-brother,news-4375.html