west didsblue
Well-Known Member
- Joined
- 2 Oct 2011
- Messages
- 33,886
Who will you vote for out of interest?You can vote for the duplicitous twat, I won't be.
Who will you vote for out of interest?You can vote for the duplicitous twat, I won't be.
You can vote for the duplicitous twat, I won't be.
Who will you vote for out of interest?
Didn't know you lived near King's Cross.
You pays your money …You can vote for the duplicitous twat, I won't be.
His big idea seems to be self referral to a specialist to cut GP waiting times. As far as I remember GP's are trained for a long time to provide an important triage service to make sure what you are complaining about - bad back, head and neck pain etc, and decide whether its ibuprofen, prescription drugs or specialist referral is needed. Also GP's are in short supply and side lining the service is not the way to encourage more recruits.
I am not sure why he feels he has to out Tory the Tories when they are so disliked and Labour hold such a lead but her really is a dislikeable leader - I'll probably hold my nose and vote Labour at the next GE as a vehicle to oust and hopefully destroy Toryism for the rest of my lifetime however I'll do so with less hope in my heart than I did in 1997
His big idea seems to be self referral to a specialist to cut GP waiting times. As far as I remember GP's are trained for a long time to provide an important triage service to make sure what you are complaining about - bad back, head and neck pain etc, and decide whether its ibuprofen, prescription drugs or specialist referral is needed. Also GP's are in short supply and side lining the service is not the way to encourage more recruits.
I am not sure why he feels he has to out Tory the Tories when they are so disliked and Labour hold such a lead but her really is a dislikeable leader - I'll probably hold my nose and vote Labour at the next GE as a vehicle to oust and hopefully destroy Toryism for the rest of my lifetime however I'll do so with less hope in my heart than I did in 1997
The problem is obviously that we don’t have enough staff.
The NHS has been built for decades to have A+E and GPs as the point of entry, and the key to fixing the current issues is expanding those until the service is better.
Is my understanding that this is your position (or interpretation of what Starmer meant) right:
because A&E are overrun, and GPs are also overrun, then having people refer themselves to private healthcare makes sense
Or were you only referring to the (very obvious) lack of staff?
Staffing is the issue with nearly 150000 vacancies alone in the NHS and similar numbers in the care industry.
We can find money to pay an agency up to £5000 for a shift for a doctor but we apparently can’t find it to pay people correctly?
Only thing broken is the politics of those running the show!
We have a system where there’s loads of GPs and few specialists because the gp sees everyone and then acts as a gatekeeper referring out to the specialists when needed.
If every Tom, Dick and Harry with a back twinge can self refer to a physio then all of the physio availability going to be used up taking self-referrals and rejecting 80% of them.
The solution is simply to train more GPs, not take work from GPS and dump it on specialists.
Otherwise we probably need to triple the number of all specialists we have for them to get through the workload of taking self-referrals.
agreed - the agency costs seem ludicrous compared to just hiring more staff.
I wonder whether we have the training facilities ready to restore the situation, or how long it would take to get them up to needed capacity.
I’d say it’s doubtful although I’m sure universities will say the courses are there.
Issues are miserly bursaries to encourage people into the training needed (wife looked into becoming a midwife) but we simply couldn’t afford her 3 years of training and no salary and then of course, the salaries and work life balance that comes with working within the NHS.
It simply has to reward those working within it.
Doesn't sound like a good policy proposal once you break it down but that isn't really the point. If it appeals to people to vote for him, he can always junk it later down the line.
Politics isn't really about the real world.
It’s about selling a fictional narrative of the real world.
It feels like Labour are spending 90% of their time appealing to Brexit voters and tories.
I suppose they think that's the margin they need to go after, anyone remotely Labour is going to vote for them after 13+ years of Tory rule, but it's really frustrating because it feels like there's 2 Labours - the one that's on TV appealing to the people who put us in this mess, and the one that makes pledges and promises and policy announcements at conferences.
I didn't watch the whole interview but as far as I can tell the Labour leader did an interview on the NHS without mentioning Labour's headline NHS policy.
HE didn't mention it in his OpEd in the Sunday Telegraph FFS!
non-paywall link.