5 a day and stay off the fags and booze.
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Private Healthcare Question - How to avoid NHS
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If you have a critical situation while at a private hospital you get sent to a NHS hospital because most private facilities don't even have a crash cart -- or whatever they are called - for emergencies. You take your chances. Best bet is a private ward of a NHS hospital.Originally posted by Old Greg View PostBroadly speaking I would agree.
In addition to emergency treatment, highly specialist treatment is better done in an NHS hospital (but the ward environment may be a private one). The problem with the NHS is usually not the (medical) treatment, but the (nursing) care and the ward environment.
Private is usually fine for outpatient consultations, scans and short stay elective 'conveyor belt' procedures like cataracts, hip replacements etc. You should be aware that overnight standards of care is highly variable (I understand anecdotally) in private hospitals, with a Resident Medical Officer who would not be left in charge in an NHS hospital, and teams of agency nurses who do not regularly work together and who may not be familiar with local protocols. In particular, avoid private hospitals for anything that may need an intensive care bed. Finally, check that your surgeon is a good NHS surgeon, and not someone flown in from the continent to do a list and then flow back out again with no continuity of care.McCoy: "Medical men are trained in logic."
Spock: "Trained? Judging from you, I would have guessed it was trial and error."Comment
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Unless you're old.Originally posted by sasguru View PostFor emergencies, yes you'd go to the NHS, but to be fair, it's really good at the (literally) cutting edge stuff.
If not an emergency you can always go to a private GP or Harley St. specialist who'll refer you direct to a specialist covered by BUPA or whatever.Comment
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I agree with the conclusion, but I would expect that any hospital with an operating theatre has proper resuscitation equipment. The problem is likely to be the staff around out of hours.Originally posted by lilelvis2000 View PostIf you have a critical situation while at a private hospital you get sent to a NHS hospital because most private facilities don't even have a crash cart -- or whatever they are called - for emergencies. You take your chances. Best bet is a private ward of a NHS hospital.Comment
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I don't know, where are the figures? I assume you have them.Originally posted by CoolCat View PostHow many UK A & E's regularly fit stents within an hour of admission?
No, it tells us precisely nothing. The fact the royal family get preferential treatment is not a surprise.I would have thought the duke of Edinburgh being taken by helicopter over the top of several closer A & E's to one of the few that are decent at this would tell you all you need to know.
Sad as that must be, I'm afraid it doesn't. An isolated incident doesn't tell you much at all, whether the person is your wife or a total stranger is not medically relevant.Being at the funeral of someone told he needed an immediate stent who died without one a week later told me all i need to know.Originally posted by MaryPoppinsI'd still not breastfeed a naziOriginally posted by vetranUrine is quite nourishingComment
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If you are old make sure you have family to come to every appointment and to stay with you as long as possible in hospital.Originally posted by mudskipper View PostUnless you're old."You’re just a bad memory who doesn’t know when to go away" JRComment
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WHS. And exercise.Originally posted by minestrone View Post5 a day and stay off the fags and booze.While you're waiting, read the free novel we sent you. It's a Spanish story about a guy named 'Manual.'Comment
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Isn't life grandOriginally posted by mudskipper View PostIndeed. And not just for a few weeks - it needs to be day after day, week after week, month after month, year after miserable fecking year...
While you're waiting, read the free novel we sent you. It's a Spanish story about a guy named 'Manual.'Comment
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Well it's just as well we're all making whopping contributions in employer's and employee's NI then isn't it? At least we know we'd have paid our share should we ever have to use the health serviceComment
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