Originally posted by Taita
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Collateral Damage - NHS and Agencies
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Originally posted by Stevie Wonder BoyI can't see any way to do it can you please advise?
I want my account deleted and all of my information removed, I want to invoke my right to be forgotten. -
Originally posted by unixman View PostNursing should be vocational in my view and now professional. On that, "professional" really just means getting paid for what you do. Viz, professionals are in it for the pay. I want nurses to be in it for the vocation, not the money. They should really be "angels" in a sense. People you would happily trust with your life, or that of an elderly relative. Less Diamond White and more Florence Nightingale.Comment
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Originally posted by Taita View PostCheap jibe. Do our University Graduates get given their degrees or do they purchase them?
Fake degrees, but real certificates - HR Future: South Africa's Leading Print, Digital and Online Human Strategy Magazine
Fake degrees: Software tycoon arrested as police investigate credentials from 'Barkley' and 'Columbiana' - Americas - World - The Independent
University of Wales degree and visa scam exposed by BBC - BBC NewsAlways forgive your enemies; nothing annoys them so much.Comment
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Originally posted by vetran View PostPossibly I will be attacked but I never really understood the requirement for all Nurses to be graduates.
I'm perfectly happy to believe that with experience some may want to retrain or gain a degree later but lets be honest if you were a graduate and you were offered an nice comfy office job 9-5 or cleaning up someones fluids all night for £21K which would you choose? In the City that is hardly a decent wage.
Seems reasonable to limit agency cut to < 10% and increase Bank wages to cut out Agencies long term.
Try asking you're average junior doc to administer an IV.....
Or a glorified arse wiper with no qualifications?Rhyddid i lofnod psychocandy!!!!Comment
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Originally posted by psychocandy View PostLOL. Because a lot of doctors are complete nobheads who dont care about the patients. Surely you'd want an 'educated'person looking after you're wellbeing? Someone who can check what the doctor is doing, knows the drugs, knows the way patients need care etc?
Try asking you're average junior doc to administer an IV.....
Or a glorified arse wiper with no qualifications?Always forgive your enemies; nothing annoys them so much.Comment
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Originally posted by vetran View Postfrom memory up until recently the doctor was the only one who could pierce the skin. Nurses doing IVs was introduced before the degree requirement.
Doctors in fact have little idea how to do it because they get the nurse to do it.Rhyddid i lofnod psychocandy!!!!Comment
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Originally posted by psychocandy View PostEh? No idea where that came from - wrong.
Doctors in fact have little idea how to do it because they get the nurse to do it.
For doctor, read nurse - UK - News - The Independent
And then there is the shortage of nurses, highlighted by a report from the RCN this week which showed that unemployment levels among nurses are the lowest they have been for a decade. Between 1983 and 1997 there will be have been a cutback of 55 per cent in the number of student nurses being trained.
The turning point in extending the role of the nurse came with a document published in June 1992 by the United Kingdom Central Council for Nursing, Midwifery and Health Visiting, entitledThe Scope of Professional Practice. In essence, it permits a nurse,midwife or health visitor to care for his or her patient in whatever way they see fit as long as they are competent in the task they undertake and are fully accountable for it. Previously a nurse who took on additional tasks, such as intravenous injections or suturing, needed a proficiency certificate which was specific only for that task and valid only for the hospital where she worked.
The Department of Health was initially reluctant to accept the UKCC document and gave way only because it coincided with demands for the Government to reduce the hours worked by junior doctors.
In addition to the UKCC document, there has been the rise of the nurse practitioner, an American innovation which is redefining the traditional role of the doctor. There are more than 250 nurse practitioners in England and Wales, working on hospital wards and in health centres, able in certain circumstances to examine a patient, prescribe a drug, monitor a long-term treatment, order an X-ray, give an injection and stitch a wound.Always forgive your enemies; nothing annoys them so much.Comment
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Nurse Practitioners still have to hand over complex illnesses and investigations to doctors whether they are a GP or specialist, but if your condition is stable or it your illness is one they can handle they deal with it.
There can be advantages as a patient for dealing with one over a GP. For example GPs now don't do blood tests at all, but a nurse practitioner can do one if there is time in appointment and it can get to the lab OK."You’re just a bad memory who doesn’t know when to go away" JRComment
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When I was in hospital last year the nurses were pretty much doing everything medical. That meant giving you pills, taking blood, putting in/taking out an IV, etc. A nurse even took out my catheter. The doctor was somebody you'd see for maybe 2 minutes every morning, and he was mainly asking the nurse how you were doing.
Things like changing sheets, cleaning up, bringing you food/water etc. was handled by Group 4 people.Will work inside IR35. Or for food.Comment
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Originally posted by VectraMan View PostWhen I was in hospital last year the nurses were pretty much doing everything medical. That meant giving you pills, taking blood, putting in/taking out an IV, etc. A nurse even took out my catheter. The doctor was somebody you'd see for maybe 2 minutes every morning, and he was mainly asking the nurse how you were doing.
Things like changing sheets, cleaning up, bringing you food/water etc. was handled by Group 4 people.Comment
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