Massive Quasars wrote:This is a governmental problem out of your control, for the most part. It doesn't help the situation to fret over it and potentially affect the quality of service you provide your patients.
In england, the government are in the habit of making pronouncements about how they're making the health service better through reference to some completely meaningless and made-up measure of "quality", while blaming the staff for shortcomings. Failure to meet these targets means we get out funding
cut; meeting them means we get our full funding and possibly the opportunity to get patronized by the government. This means that I'm on the cutting edge of the funding problem in the NHS every minute of every day. Damn right I fret.
I'll give you a nice circular example. The government has decided, entirely arbitrarily, that nobody can spend more than four hours in an A&E department without counting as a strike against the hospital - regardless of their reason for attending. So if you have a hangnail and turn up by ambulance at 4 in the morning, you have to be seen and discharged within 4 hours or the hospital's funding can potentially suffer - even if all of the casualty doctors are tied up with patients who are actually sick. Because it takes several days to get an appointment with a GP, and people know that if they go to casualty it will take at most 2-3 hours to get seen, they turn up in droves - including utter cunts who turn up at 6 in the morning with chronic problems "because I wanted to beat the queue". Since the 4 hour limit was imposed, we've seen attendances go up by about 20,000 patients per year. This means that my department has had to vastly increase staffing just to keep up (bear in mind we also have a very diverse immigrant population and hence language difficulties take up a great deal of the doctors' time).
Many of these patients have trivial or made up problems - coughs and colds, etc. Many of them are repeat attenders who turn up every day - drunks, druggies, loons (not mad per se, just crazy).
The practical upshot of this is that:
a) every single time I have my time wasted, the hospital risks having its funding cut.
b) care for those who need it most is far from optimal. Since anyone who turns up has the right to be seen, we have to wade though all the crap to get to the patients who are sick.