Film, Media & TV50 mins ago
Doctors/consultants Hours
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So the government are pressing ahead with Hospital Consultants and Doctors 7 days a week ,obviously this does not mean they must work 7 days it just means that the hospital /wards must be covered for this time ,It is unbelievable that if you are in a Hospital over a weekend there are very few doctors working also apart from Emergencies Theatres are usually closed over the weekend what a complete waste of money having all the equipment letf idol some of which is on Hire.
Remember many NHS Consultants also take on Private work also working out of the very Hospital that employs then on a so called full time basis.
Remember many NHS Consultants also take on Private work also working out of the very Hospital that employs then on a so called full time basis.
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For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.Do you think it unreasonable that hospital consultants have time off?
Can you think of any other Public Sector worker that works 7 days a week?
Hospitals are covered "nominally" by a consultant every day and every weekend, but you are correct, usually the weekend is covered by junior staff who "can" call on the consultant.
Yes, NHS Consultants can do private work, but they take a drop in salary despite committing "whole time" to the NHS work.
Nurses, ancillary staff also need time off, i think that you would agree, but one cannot run an operating theatre without porters and nurses.
Weekends have always been staffed by junior staff on a rota basis and depending on the quality of such staff will depend upon the safety of the patient.
What would your solution be?
Can you think of any other Public Sector worker that works 7 days a week?
Hospitals are covered "nominally" by a consultant every day and every weekend, but you are correct, usually the weekend is covered by junior staff who "can" call on the consultant.
Yes, NHS Consultants can do private work, but they take a drop in salary despite committing "whole time" to the NHS work.
Nurses, ancillary staff also need time off, i think that you would agree, but one cannot run an operating theatre without porters and nurses.
Weekends have always been staffed by junior staff on a rota basis and depending on the quality of such staff will depend upon the safety of the patient.
What would your solution be?
So one would have 2 days off in the week ( no OP's or Operating sessions), but at the weekend Out Patients and Operating?......No! No! that can't be correct.
The Consultant would be named as "on call" at the weekend, but the juniors would do the work.....SO.......that is what happens now.
What would change?
The Consultant would be named as "on call" at the weekend, but the juniors would do the work.....SO.......that is what happens now.
What would change?
// there are very few doctors working also apart from Emergencies Theatres are usually closed //
typo surely - emergency theatres are usually available 24/7
// obviously this does not mean they must work 7 days //
no it is not obvious - there was a lot of hard work put into stopping doctors being forced to do a days work, night resident on call and then two lists/two clinics the next day. [ 9 - 5 agreed but 9 on one day to 5 on the next ]
No it is not obvious what he wants
typo surely - emergency theatres are usually available 24/7
// obviously this does not mean they must work 7 days //
no it is not obvious - there was a lot of hard work put into stopping doctors being forced to do a days work, night resident on call and then two lists/two clinics the next day. [ 9 - 5 agreed but 9 on one day to 5 on the next ]
No it is not obvious what he wants
// What would change? //
I think they are trying to introduce routine operating for example or clinics at the week end - on top of the emergency services
without necessarlly altering anything else - labs, ( admin of course) Blood transfusion, X ray ( god who needs them ? )
so they arent trying to alter on call - the consultants already do on call and spent a decent amount of time now inside the Hospital
but are trying to get "continental shifts" 9-5 working for routine work as well, for those not on call ....
The consultants already accept the need for on call cover and to come in but not necessarily contintental shifts .....
when I was stuck on a trolley in North Manchester Cas for ten hours
I wasnt worried by lack of a consultant as I told the reg I had AF. No beta blockers in Cas ( ! er what, excuse me ? ) and one tab was carried down from a ward at Hour 8 like the Pope carrying a consecrated host....
There were five of us needing admission and the medical reg declined to see any of us on the grounds that he couldnt monitor treatment if he initiated it. -which I thought was fair enough TBH
I was found a bed at 4am having gone to cas at 6 pm the previous day
I think they are trying to introduce routine operating for example or clinics at the week end - on top of the emergency services
without necessarlly altering anything else - labs, ( admin of course) Blood transfusion, X ray ( god who needs them ? )
so they arent trying to alter on call - the consultants already do on call and spent a decent amount of time now inside the Hospital
but are trying to get "continental shifts" 9-5 working for routine work as well, for those not on call ....
The consultants already accept the need for on call cover and to come in but not necessarily contintental shifts .....
when I was stuck on a trolley in North Manchester Cas for ten hours
I wasnt worried by lack of a consultant as I told the reg I had AF. No beta blockers in Cas ( ! er what, excuse me ? ) and one tab was carried down from a ward at Hour 8 like the Pope carrying a consecrated host....
There were five of us needing admission and the medical reg declined to see any of us on the grounds that he couldnt monitor treatment if he initiated it. -which I thought was fair enough TBH
I was found a bed at 4am having gone to cas at 6 pm the previous day
As I said in my "Happy Birthday" post I have been going to four different hospitals over the past eighteen months (greedy I know) and my appointments at Salford Royal have all been on a Saturday or Sunday morning. 8.30am on a Sunday seemed weird at first but no traffic and easy parking meant by 9.30am I was on my way home with the Sunday papers. Great. Ideal for workers who then don't need to take time off work. It is one of the top performing hospitals in the country so they must be doing something right. All the consultants I've seen seem quite happy with the system.
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