That sounds bonkers, but I don’t doubt it. Golf buggies would be sensible I guess (especially in this day and age of e-vehicles), probably more so than milk floats which would actually be about the right size to carry beds
Also, if there was an HTA (hospital traffic accident ), they’d be in the right place to be quickly shipped to A&E.
Ooooh. You lucky thing. Around here in sunny Manchester, you’ll be lucky if you can find even a wide enough ledge, yet alone a chair, to rest one’s ailing and weary body as one sets out along the corridors of doom.
There are many entrances to Doncaster Royal Infirmary, I think the idea is, to only enter close to where you want to be. The x-ray department is miles from any entrance though and it is quite a walk whichever entrance you use. There are seats that fold out from the wall in various places if it’s a struggle. Last time we were here we used the shuttle bus. It’s a free bus service that runs from a massive car park down near the racecourse. However, we thought it might be quicker just to pop in for the x-ray…The x-ray itself took about fifteen minutes…including the waiting…
We were wrong…
Because I had some today at a navy friends funeral and it was a challenge to drive home afterwards…
You said it wasn’t very exciting where you live Morty…I thought a bit of rum might wake up the residents of your street?
But you can’t clean underneath a travelator Dex, so all the empty lager cans and fag buts will congregate underneath…Have you met any Yorkshire nurses?
Can’t we send children down there with a bucket of water with disinfectant in it? When I were t’lad, I’d have happily earned a bob or two for such a task.
As for the nurse …. I went to see the German comedian Henning Wehn a couple of years ago. One of his jokes was that the reason for hospitals having double doors wasn’t to allow beds to get through, but for nurses to be able to get through.
Grief, OGF. I hope Mrs. OGF’s excursion will result in a definitive diagnosis and plan for treatment.
The parking solution to hospitals here is free valet services at the main entrances (no tips permitted). The valets have a dedicated parking area and anyone can use the service.
Thanks Surfermom, we are slowly becoming a third world country here with a very overstretched and undermanned national health service. There’s a good reason why our hospitals, Doctors Surgeries and care homes are staffed by foreign workers, some of whom can not speak understandable English.
All our young people are attending Universities gaining degrees in media studies, journalism and natural history. Unfortunately, we are not short of Wild life reporters, news readers or production teams who make programs to fill our minds with garbage.
And even then, only a few succeed. Both of my Grand daughters are not employed doing jobs they are qualified for, and spent the most important years of their lives working their way through university, for what?. …
Mrs Fox spent most of her working life working in care homes and nursing homes, the pay was atrocious and the hours were long, but she loved the work.
Why is the government sponsoring people in university when they could be making training and working in the medical profession more attractive for students…Or do they think money is better spent propping up foreign wars and compensating countries for things that happened two hundred years ago…
Sorry Surfer, rant over…
Mrs Fox has been referred to a specialist for assessment, some physio and a cortisone injection in her painful knee…Next week…
OGF, unfortunately your healthcare challenges are the same here too. I have a neurologist friend who is breaking away from his practice to form his own as one last ditch effort before he leaves medicine altogether (except for volunteer work abroad) because he is so hamstrung by government and insurance bureaucracy.
Our community has a program in which high school students, age 16-18, choose a career program once every semester in which they are immersed into the profession by being paired with a mentor. The idea is that they get the kids past their dreams of a profession into the hard work reality. The purpose is dual; it helps young people figure out what they might - and might not want to do - so expensive education isn’t wasted.It also guides them, often with scholarships and likely future job offer to return to the community and support economic needs. Here, the program offers training in healthcare, hospitality and tourism, construction and maintenance trades, aviation, and education - all careers face labor shortages.
I had no idea that Mrs. OGF had worked with older people as her chosen career. My daughter is working on her degree to do likewise. I wish her some relief with the cortisone along with a more permanently effective treatment plan.
Thanks Surfer…
Yes the problems with the health service are international, and I can understand your friends frustrations with the medical profession.
I just wonder about our young people leaving further education at 21 or older.
I was thrust into an engineering apprenticeship at 15 when I left school with no qualifications. I must admit that mechanical engineering was something I loved.
As a numpty 15 year old, I took the orders and learned skills from the old experienced blokes. By the time I finished my apprenticeship at 21 I was let loose on a mechanical world of wonder, with a sideboard full of qualifications…
I just don’t think that students leaving University at 21 with probably more qualifications than their employers are going to take orders or even accept advice when they will obviously know better than their older peers.
I’ve actually taught some of those six month wonders, and they are a pain in the butt…