Strands #260 “Coming Up For...
Quizzes & Puzzles1 min ago
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For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.Although I'm sorry about you having to wait for that long.. as somebody who's worked in an A & E... I can assure you Gerry that the staff dont keep you waiting deliberately. They are genuinely busy. Most casualty depts now employ a 'triage' system', whereby you are assessed almost immediately by a registered nurse who has recieved triage training. They can assess your need, and decide whether or not you'll die if you dont get seen there and then. Literally. And obviously... you dont die of broken fingers. Painful.. oh yes! Terminal?? No.
I'm sure that none of this is of consolation to you after your prolonged wait..... but I'm afraid that this is the nature of our present health care system. Hope you heal well and quickly though.
Painkillers... elevation.... and a bag of frozen veg.
Jo
I went to A & E recently with my son, who was displaying concussion symptoms after a bumped head. Despite the fact the place was heaving and there was a sign saying the waiting time was 3 hours, we were seen very quickly, x-rayed, reviewed, and admitted to the ward, all in about an hour and a half. This was down to the triage system, bumped heads are more dangerous than broken fingers - although not necessarily as painful! I don't think long waits at A & E are just part of the current NHS system, I have memories as a child in the 60s and 70s waiting for hours and hours in casualty departments! I believe it is partly to discourage people from attending in non-urgent cases. If it was a 10 minute wait we'd all be there rather than waiting for an appointment to see to our GP. Hope your fingers recover soon!
Under-resourced and under-staffed. But I would still rather have a "free" health service and therefore the opportunity to be treated.
Personally I don't think your wait was extreme (although I sympathise that every minute probably felt like an hour). Casualty staff do a tremendous job, and they can't time emergencies.
Get well soon.
And just be glad it wasn't a Friday night!
First of all, it must have taken you ages to type all of that with dodgy fingers, so good for you for persevering!
Secondly, I have had to wait just as long if not longer at times and though I understand that urgent cases take priority, it can be frustrating when you are in pain or have a very obvious problem (!) and have to wait for so long.
I recently had a rather severe allergic reaction (cause unknown) which caused my face and lips to swell up making me look like a cross between Martin Clunes and a cod! So imagine my horror at having to sit in the waiting room, surrounded by a lot of staring people, for what seemed like an eternity.
Even the nurses recoiled when they finally saw me, but after checking that I wasn't about to go into anaphylaxis, I was sent back into the waiting room until a doctor was finally available, some two hours later. He administered some Piriton pills and told me to wait until the swelling went down - and where did he tell me to wait? You guessed it, back in the waiting room, where I stupidly sat for another hour before finally being sent packing.
Oh, well at least I kept an entire waiting room full of people amused/horrified for an evening!
Last time I went, I had a gash on top of my head which was pouring blood. Me and my friend went to to the reception and were asked 'Which one of you is the patient?'....errrr the one with blood trickling down her face holding a large cloth to her head!
Then I had to wait 4 hours to be seen by a doctor. Once I had been seen, I only had to wait 10 mins to be stictched up but 4 hours with one hand one your head is not comfortable!
I'm about to upset a lot of people with my comments, but here goes ... I worked in emergency health care for 10 years and yes, the system is understaffed and underfunded but it is not helped by people who turn up for the most unnecessary reasons and clog up an already overloaded department. A woman bitten by a mosquito an hour ago worries she might have malaria; a paper cut quarter inch long on a woman's thumb; a cough for two weeks - THESE ARE NOT EMERGENCIES. Why do they do it? And a lot of people are extremely ignorant about their own bodies, have no idea what is 'normal', so present themselves in front of a doctor the moment they think something is 'unusual'. People also think that calling an ambulance will get them seen quicker - ABSOLUTELY WRONG! Just because you come wheeled in on a stretcher does not make you an emergency; you will be triaged just the same way as someone who walks in and treated according to the seriousness of your condition. And the reason someone having an asthma attack was seen within 10 minutes is not because they were in another country but because it's potentially a life-threatening condition, they would receive the same treatment here. I also think that in a society where we are becoming used to getting and having everything the instant we want it that our expectations are becoming unrealistic; that our every need, no matter how trivial it is, should be met immediatley.
And don't get me started on the Friday/Saturday night drunks who come demanding immediate attention and expect me to be personally responsible for their stupidity.
I guess you can see why I gave it up in the end.
Thanxs for you answers guya & girls & as i said before i'm not trying to come across as a special case that was demanding to be seen at once.Katejess44 i managed to type with my right hand and my index finger on my left.It's the middle finger on my left finger that is broken.Perhaps maybe if i had got an x-ray done right away then at least i would have known for sure if any was broken & it would have been worth my while staying all that time to see the doctor to get it treated.I was thinking as i was sitiing there what happens when i finally get seen & none of them are broken i've wasted over 2 & a half hours just sitting here.
1968, North London, I was hit by car in the street and could not stand up. I was whisked to Stanmore Hospital in an ambulance, stretchered in and seen by nurses and a doctor within minutes of arrival. They must have made their diagnosis fairly swiftly, as I was trundled out into the corridor near the waiting area, where I lay for 3 hours. I was pretty fed up when they came to take me to a ward and eventually explain what was wrong. I had a broken knee joint and it needed an operation to put bits of metal and self-tapping screws in!
The Casualty Department can only flow as fast as the admission system, even though individuals yet to be seen may not need to be admitted. Casualty can get really clogged with patients waiting for admission, no further treatment possible in Casualty. Mother was a medic in Casualty for while, and she used to call it "Triviatrics" for much the same reason as Golem has explained.
Two years ago I took my then boyfriend to hospital with suspected meningitis. He was triaged as orange (correct me if I'm wrong medical professionals!) - which is "one short of nearly dead" and seen immediately. Once they established it wasn't meningitis he did have to wait a long time before they came to discover that it was dodgy kidneys. However at that point we were just so relieved that he was low priority that we didn't care.
On another occasion I personally got bumped down the list repeatedly because there was a multi-car pile up very near by and then another major incident. Frankly I was happy to wait. If my relative died because the doctor was too busy fixing broken fingers, treating a mozzie bite or treating some idiot with a cold I would be furious. The triage system has always seemed brilliant to me - simple, yet effective, and totally necessary to good healthcare.
Oh yeah - hands up who PROMISES they would not complain if taxes were increased to pay for better A&E. Ok - now put your hand down if you're lying. I reckon Gerry could count you/us all on the working fingers of his left hand!!! :-p
Gerry - get well soon! :-)
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