Keep right on 'til the end of the read...

Darzi

Labour have had fourteen years to get their Health and Social Care strategy ducks in a row.

The supposed £22 billion black hole has not been authenticated by Treasury and may well be fiction.

The statement “The NHS is broken” is merely a prelude to more privatisation, outsourcing, cuts and rationing-prior to diluting real Doctors by PAs and AAs ready for private health insurance-as are ICB’s-insurance pools, with exclusion of expensive patients.

Darzi is a convenient stooge to list all the failings caused intentionally by government.

No attempt is made to recover Di do’s £37 billion, included in the “record funding” always parrotted.

Streeting, Starmer, Blair, Darzi are choreographed steps in reducing expectations, paving the way for dismantling the NHS and Social Care, promoted by Kate Andrews, Thiel, Trump, and right wing Think Tanks in Tufton Street, the IEA.

Blair: no GPs, merely Bill Gate’s chatbots-which are such a great success keeping people from the service...

Starmer, Streeting: more privatisation, outsourcing, giving NHS funds to profiteers

No attempt to train more Doctors, Nurses, Midwives, Radiographers, Oncologists
GP, and hire more GPs from the many already qualified and seeking a position.

GPs should be paid from core GP core funds, not ARRS or NHS net.

Lansley 2012 and H&SC Act 2021 are disasters.

With no more money-all this is a pointless PR exercise to cover more failure and dismantling…

Essential messages: Please view

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midwives: leaving because they cannot provide the high standards of care

Nurses: overworked, overloaded, underpaid, huge gaps in staffing

Dentists: gone already...

A&E: too few admission beds, doctors, extra staff refused by Trust managers

ICU too few beds, nurses, Doctors

Mental Health: too few bewds, staff, specialist doctors

Cancer care: too few diagnostics, GPs, specialist oncologists

GPs: too few, forced out by government and PAs..., burnt out, overloaded, early retirement, emigrate of private

Too few beds for A&E, free up discharge with Discharge pods while care is found!!!

Priorities

Train and retain more Doctors, stop mistreating and bullying Doctors

Frontline staff need Full Pay Restoration-to recruit and retain the best!

GPs need proper funding for expenses and income!

Hospital Trusts each need interoperable good, fast IT. talking countrywide is too ambitious, too impossible...!

 

Two vastly different "broken" systems:

The publicly funded NHS, from taxation, should ensure everyone receives equal care-most equitable...

but the rich should pay the same percentage of their income...

The US spends $4.5 trillion, $13,000 per person on health...

Many are uninsured, 590,000 go bancrupt each year...

Vast profits made by private medical insurers, big pharma, hospital groups...

Treatment and recovery
Check if it's sepsis
Sepsis is life threatening. It can be hard to spot.

There are lots of possible symptoms. They can be like symptoms of other conditions, including flu or a chest infection.
If you think you or someone you look after has symptoms of sepsis, call 999 or go to A&E. Trust your instincts.
Immediate action required:

Call 999 or go to A&E if:
A baby or young child has any of these symptoms of sepsis:

-blue, grey, pale or blotchy skin, lips or tongue-on brown or black skin, this may be easier to see on the palms of the hands or soles of the feet
-a rash that does not fade when you roll a glass over it, the same as meningitis
-difficulty breathing (you may notice grunting noises or their stomach sucking under their ribcage), breathlessness or breathing very fast
-a weak, high-pitched cry that's not like their normal cry
-not responding like they normally do, or not interested in feeding or normal activities
-being sleepier than normal or difficult to wake
-They may not have all these symptoms.

Find your nearest A&E
Immediate action required:Call 999 or go to A&E if:
An adult or older child has any of these symptoms of sepsis:

-acting confused, slurred speech or not making sense
-blue, grey, pale or blotchy skin, lips or tongue – on brown or black skin, this may be easier to see on the palms of the hands or soles of the feet
-a rash that does not fade when you roll a glass over it, the same as meningitis
-difficulty breathing, breathlessness or breathing very fast
-They may not have all these symptoms.

Find your nearest A&E
Information:
Do not drive to A&E. Ask someone to drive you or call 999 and ask for an ambulance.

Bring any medicines you take with you.

Urgent advice:Call 111 now if:
You, your child or someone you look after:
-feels very unwell or like there's something seriously wrong
-has not had a pee all day (for adults and older children) or in the last 12 hours (for babies and young children)
-keeps vomiting and cannot keep any food or milk down (for babies and young children)
-has swelling or pain around a cut or wound
-has a very high or low temperature, feels hot or cold to the touch, or is shivering
Do not worry if you're not sure if it's sepsis – it's still best to call 111.

They can tell you what to do, arrange a phone call from a nurse or doctor, or call you an ambulance.

Sepsis can be especially hard to spot in:
-babies and young children
-people with dementia
-people with a learning disability
-people who have difficulty communicating
Information:
Further information on sepsis for people with a learning disability and their carers:

NHS England: easy read information about sepsis for people with a learning disability
YouTube: NHS Sherwood Forest Hospitals video about sepsis for people with a learning disability
YouTube: NHS Sherwood Forest Hospitals video about sepsis for families and carers of people with a learning disability

What is sepsis?
Sepsis is a life-threatening reaction to an infection.
It happens when your immune system overreacts to an infection and starts to damage your body's own tissues and organs.

You cannot catch sepsis from another person.

Essential reading:

EU law, TTIP & the NHS Rightclick-open

The EU is making privatisation permanent Right click-open

Darzi Rides Again: John Lister Right click-open