HBHB
Well-Known Member
Largely & In reality the healthcare system isn't broken, it's just over utilised by people who don't need it.
Day and night, the hospitals are full of people who simply don't need to be there. People who've had a toothache for 3 weeks, can't sleep and so call an Ambulance using 000 at 3 in the morning. Infected fingers for 2 weeks that get bumped in the night, call an ambulance. Head colds, runny noses, psych cases off their meds, teenagers who only had one drink (plus the 15 before leaving home as a pre-load) fingernails with a small haematoma under them, ingrown toenails, coughs colds pox and coldsores tennis elbow and itchy moles. Then there's acopic elderly who need a warm hand and hot tea to get them through one more night alone, homeless old guys in need of a feed and the trippers who aren't safe on the street. The drug seeking bored housewife with a belly ache and the drink driver who is getting a blood test because they suddenly developed "asthma" and can't blow in the tube.
Add to that, the usual aches pains and broken bones, life threatening arrhythmias, strokes and bleeds and you get a system that's bursting with over use.
The key isn't more hospitals, but in educating people when to use it and when to tough it out to see a GP in the morning or when to crack open the packet of band aids.
The system isn't perfect, but would be a whole lot more efficient without numpties filling the corridors.
Glad to be out of it.
Trust you're now on the mend.
Day and night, the hospitals are full of people who simply don't need to be there. People who've had a toothache for 3 weeks, can't sleep and so call an Ambulance using 000 at 3 in the morning. Infected fingers for 2 weeks that get bumped in the night, call an ambulance. Head colds, runny noses, psych cases off their meds, teenagers who only had one drink (plus the 15 before leaving home as a pre-load) fingernails with a small haematoma under them, ingrown toenails, coughs colds pox and coldsores tennis elbow and itchy moles. Then there's acopic elderly who need a warm hand and hot tea to get them through one more night alone, homeless old guys in need of a feed and the trippers who aren't safe on the street. The drug seeking bored housewife with a belly ache and the drink driver who is getting a blood test because they suddenly developed "asthma" and can't blow in the tube.
Add to that, the usual aches pains and broken bones, life threatening arrhythmias, strokes and bleeds and you get a system that's bursting with over use.
The key isn't more hospitals, but in educating people when to use it and when to tough it out to see a GP in the morning or when to crack open the packet of band aids.
The system isn't perfect, but would be a whole lot more efficient without numpties filling the corridors.
Glad to be out of it.
Trust you're now on the mend.