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Our bloated NHS - it’s beyond ridiculous now.

(521 Posts)

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Urmstongran Mon 16-May-22 10:07:56

At the moment, only about one third of NHS staff are doctors or nurses (roughly 450,000 out of 1.4million employees).

The new analysis shows that the number of officials working in the Department of Health and NHS England has more than doubled in two years, with even sharper rises seen at the most senior levels. Meanwhile the number of nurses rose by just seven per cent, thinktank the Policy Exchange found.

Its experts said the trends showed an “astonishing” explosion in central bureaucracy, calling for an urgent review and action to slim down and streamline its workings.

The findings come ahead of a review of leadership in the NHS by a former army general.

Sir Gordon Messenger has been sent in by Sajid Javid, the Health Secretary, amid concern over the quality of management in the NHS as the service faces the biggest backlogs in its history.

volver Mon 16-May-22 16:50:21

Urmstongran

And get rid of all translators. That would either make the health tourists go somewhere else, learn English or make sure they are accompanied by someone who does speak English. In France & Spain they don't pander to such nonsense as having every piece of health information in 15 languages.. we are just bonkers.

Is that right now?

www.expat.com/forum/viewtopic.php?id=941358

Urmstongran Mon 16-May-22 16:51:33

Getting personal again growstuff I see. It never takes you long to fire from the hip. My Spanish gets me by (bars, restaurants and shops). If I needed medical appointment I would ensure I was accompanied by a Spanish speaking friend (I’ve done that in the past). What I wouldn't expect is to turn up and expect the Spanish system, paid for by Spanish taxpayers, to facilitate my poor language capabilities. Unlike the UK system ... a colleague in the Bookings Office for out patient appointments said letters were sent out “and if you need a translator please contact this .... number”. Beggars belief.

growstuff Mon 16-May-22 16:51:46

Glorianny

I just wondered about Boris's promise of more nurses and Googled it.
I came up with this
A progress report published today shows that overall total nurse numbers now stand at 327,907, as of December 2021, compared to 300,904 in September 2019.
www.gov.uk/government/news/government-over-halfway-to-delivering-50000-more-nurses-by-2024

But if the OP is right that means there are only about 120,000 doctors
I'm investigating that.

127,959 full-time equivalents in England - according to the NHS.

growstuff Mon 16-May-22 16:52:34

Urmstongran

Getting personal again growstuff I see. It never takes you long to fire from the hip. My Spanish gets me by (bars, restaurants and shops). If I needed medical appointment I would ensure I was accompanied by a Spanish speaking friend (I’ve done that in the past). What I wouldn't expect is to turn up and expect the Spanish system, paid for by Spanish taxpayers, to facilitate my poor language capabilities. Unlike the UK system ... a colleague in the Bookings Office for out patient appointments said letters were sent out “and if you need a translator please contact this .... number”. Beggars belief.

Haha! See you're in abuse mode! Doesn't take much. hmm

volver Mon 16-May-22 16:53:06

Did you actually read my link Urmstongran ?

growstuff Mon 16-May-22 16:53:23

volver

Urmstongran

And get rid of all translators. That would either make the health tourists go somewhere else, learn English or make sure they are accompanied by someone who does speak English. In France & Spain they don't pander to such nonsense as having every piece of health information in 15 languages.. we are just bonkers.

Is that right now?

www.expat.com/forum/viewtopic.php?id=941358

grin

Urmstongran Mon 16-May-22 16:54:39

You are lucky to be able to afford health insurance, most elderly can’t

With the greatest respect WWmk2 you don’t know anything about my finances. I have no savings at all. Zilch. We live totally off our monthly pensions. I’d therefore be in the bracket that can’t afford afford any health insurance then.

silverlining48 Mon 16-May-22 16:59:03

I am aware the nhs and its staff are struggling to cope these are difficult times but it’s been deliberately broken, Sell it off, run it down. Get business in. Apparently Richard Branson /Virgin runs our local hospital. Who would believe that.

A new system won’t help the poor, they will still be poor, but unless they find a system similar to that in nearby European countries, which does seem to work, probably because they pay more into it than we do ours, it will make it worse fir all of us. Sad isn’t it.

growstuff Mon 16-May-22 16:59:13

Urmstongran

Getting personal again growstuff I see. It never takes you long to fire from the hip. My Spanish gets me by (bars, restaurants and shops). If I needed medical appointment I would ensure I was accompanied by a Spanish speaking friend (I’ve done that in the past). What I wouldn't expect is to turn up and expect the Spanish system, paid for by Spanish taxpayers, to facilitate my poor language capabilities. Unlike the UK system ... a colleague in the Bookings Office for out patient appointments said letters were sent out “and if you need a translator please contact this .... number”. Beggars belief.

Why would you do that? Three hospitals in Malaga offer translation services. I expect many of the GPs speak English too.

PS. I've never seen anything translated in my own GP's surgery.

Glorianny Mon 16-May-22 16:59:44

This is much more informative
Professionally qualified clinical staff*

Professionally qualified clinical staff make up over half (53.1%) of the HCHS workforce (621,962 FTE) in December 2020. This is 4.2% (25,032) more than in December 2019.
^692,466 Headcount in December 2020. This is 3.9% (25,972) more than in December 2019.

* This group includes all HCHS doctors, qualified nurses and health visitors, midwives, qualified scientific, therapeutic and technical staff and qualified ambulance staff.

Then there are the unqualified health care assistants, cleaners, porters, kitchen staff and all the others who keep a hospital running.
digital.nhs.uk/data-and-information/publications/statistical/nhs-workforce-statistics/december-2020

Urmstongran Mon 16-May-22 17:01:08

Okay, Andalusia offers translators pre-booked. (I took my friend there wasn’t anyone to translate in the health centre on the morning I attended).

The NHS though:
Arabic
Chinese
German
Gujarati
Hindi
Italian
Polish
Portuguese
Punjabi
French
Russian
Spanish
Tamil
Turkish
Urdu

Urmstongran Mon 16-May-22 17:02:34

I mean in hospitals. Which is where I worked.

Fennel Mon 16-May-22 17:03:07

Whitewave - I was going to mentiion your point about privatisation. This has been on the minds of the Tories for a few years. Like the American health system.
That's how the pharmaceutical companies have become so wealthy
There's more to it than staffing of the NHS

GagaJo Mon 16-May-22 17:05:37

Urmstongran

And get rid of all translators. That would either make the health tourists go somewhere else, learn English or make sure they are accompanied by someone who does speak English. In France & Spain they don't pander to such nonsense as having every piece of health information in 15 languages.. we are just bonkers.

Funny that, I was given a translator in Spain.

MaizieD Mon 16-May-22 17:06:32

Urmstongran

Re ‘underfunded’. I think not. It’s just that we don’t spend the money wisely. It needs targeting better. Any managerial position containing the words ‘diversity’ or some such ought to be scrapped. We can’t afford such nonsense. The NHS has lost its way, big time.

I really don't know why people bother to argue with you, Ug.

You're clearly an expert when it comes to NHS funding.

growstuff Mon 16-May-22 17:07:32

From my local hospital website:

If you would like this information in another language,
large print or audio format, please ask the
department to contact the patient information team
[email protected]. Please
note: We do not currently hold many leaflets in other
languages; written translation requests are funded and agreed
by the department who has authored the leaflet.

It seems Spain has better translation services than the UK. Hmm ...

Callistemon21 Mon 16-May-22 17:08:46

Urmstongran

Okay, Andalusia offers translators pre-booked. (I took my friend there wasn’t anyone to translate in the health centre on the morning I attended).

The NHS though:
Arabic
Chinese
German
Gujarati
Hindi
Italian
Polish
Portuguese
Punjabi
French
Russian
Spanish
Tamil
Turkish
Urdu

You forgot Welsh ???????

Every notice etc here is translated into Welsh even though Welsh speakers are bilingual.

growstuff Mon 16-May-22 17:08:48

Message deleted by Gransnet. Here's a link to our Talk guidelines.

Glorianny Mon 16-May-22 17:08:56

My mum was treated in a clinic in Cyprus by an English speaking German doctor who was married to a Cypriot. (not that that has anything to do with our NHS)

Margiknot Mon 16-May-22 17:13:49

My observation as a mostly retired HCP was simply that there are not enough staff of any type within the NHS. Clinical staff end up doing a lot of things support staff could help with if only there were support staff, admin staff are rushed off their feet, and senior managers are trying to juggle far too much and don't last long. The NHS only works at all because most of the staff give 120%! Many of the lower grade clinical staff, support staff, specialised non clinical staff, are poorly paid and don't feel valued either.

silverlining48 Mon 16-May-22 17:15:05

Translators ...going off subject aren’t we?

I checked recently online and we, the UK, , came second to bottom in the european league of countries health spending. and staff, It’s all there if you look, so underfunded and understaffed is correct.

MaizieD Mon 16-May-22 17:16:45

I will, if provoked much further, give you all (apart from the few who already know this) my spiel about taxation not funding spending ; that the government issues its only money and can never run out of money, how the NHS is not a big black hole into which money just disappears, but in fact sustains huge amounts of private businesses directly because it doesn't make any of the supplies it needs, from drugs to dishcloths and at second hand by paying its staff, who then spend their money into the local economy.

The NHS helps to grow the economy... All nationalised industries do.

But I won't, because you've heard it all before and think it's totally uninteresting when you can have a good moan about an NHS that has been deliberately run down and has gone is going through a global pandemic with exhausted, overstretched staff and high sickness levels because of a highly infectious disease that is doing the rounds; and is doing the rounds over and over again ...

It's been said before, but I'll remind you that the NHS was in pretty good shape in 2010 when it was handed over to the tories.

Urmstongran Mon 16-May-22 17:18:50

Every notice etc here is translated into Welsh even though Welsh speakers are bilingual

Wow Calli that must cost the Welsh Assembly a fortune! Or their NHS budget. I don’t know how it works. It’s still throwing money around though whichever pot it comes from.

Urmstongran Mon 16-May-22 17:20:41

Conliblab - none have sorted out the NHS.
Perhaps it needs a Royal Commission or something? I don’t know.

MaizieD Mon 16-May-22 17:22:25

Urmstongran

Conliblab - none have sorted out the NHS.
Perhaps it needs a Royal Commission or something? I don’t know.

I think the last three words of your post just about sums it up, Ug. Though I'd add 'anything'