growstuff
Just been reading this:
www.bbc.co.uk/news/health-63894311
I have no idea how it works in practice, but it sounds like a good idea to me.
A & E is obviously not a good place to be, unless an acute hospital can offer essential treatment which is not available elsewhere.
Keeping people out of A & E has advantages for patients and would be cheaper for the NHS. It would mean that A & E would be better able to treat life-threatening emergencies.
Maybe I'm being incredibly naive, but it seems to me that investment in integrated community services and "cottage hospitals" is the way forward.
People have been coming up with these sort of ideas for years, but it seems there has been less funding in community services, so I don't accept the "emotional blackmail" about ambulance staff and nurses being the cause of old people finding it difficult to access ambulances. Governments have known about the issues (especially with an aging population) but have done very little.
Maybe I'm being incredibly naive, but it seems to me that investment in integrated community services and "cottage hospitals" is the way forward.
You are not being naive - far from it.
A while back, I spent 4 months in hospital in a ward with mostly elderly patients. I saw what happened when they were fit enough for discharge, but not well enough to cope on their own. I discussed it with the medical staff, some of whom aired their frustrations to me because they knew I could see what was going on.
After care cannot always be provided by family - if a patient needs someone to attend to them x 3/4 visits per day, a working family member just can't do it. And not all elderly patients have family within commuting distance either.
This is not a new problem is it? It's just highlighted at the moment because of the strikes (which, frightened though I am, I support).
Governments have had years to deal with the issue. They've talked - quite a bit... they've promised, a lot. Yet here we are because nothing's been done practically to solve the problem.
The whole system is failing - right from the offset, where patients can't get to see their GPs (and that is partly one of the reasons why people end up in A&E when timely intervention would have prevented it).
IMO the system is failing because the Tory 'small-state' economic model means that there is not the will to solve the problem... and as long as this government maintains its majority, it will continue to kick the can down the road and let the devil take the hindmost. The NHS is the victim of political ideology, and if you examine Tory ideology carefully, it basically means every-man-for-himself. That's my opinion, for what it is worth.