Quizzes & Puzzles5 mins ago
You Have To Laugh
Or cry may be at some of the statements Matt Hancock comes out with. They are now going to close most of the nightingales in April, he says that these hospitals have played a critical role. My question , how can staff less empty hospitals have played a critical role? I'm confused.
Answers
No doubt Stanley Johnson ,or someone related to Matt Hanckock, owned the land or had shares in the Company who built them.
14:00 Tue 09th Mar 2021
Am not sure we had the staff to do more teacake. Maybe the Nightingales were a mistake or to many built but its easy with hindsight and sometimes in a crisis people overact and want to be seen to be doing something. Maybe that what happened here but in the scheme of things it wasnt to expensive, gave some peace of mind and kept some construction workers in work.
from the guardian
Six other pop-up centres were meant to alleviate pressures around England as hospitalisations for Covid-19 cases rose rapidly. But while the Nightingales may have sent a “message of hope”, as Prince Charles said when he opened the first one, the overall scheme was a costly mistake. Manchester’s treated about 100 people with Covid; Exeter’s had 29 patients this month. Bristol and Harrogate have provided an overflow service for other patients and services. But Nightingales in Birmingham and Sunderland treated no one at all. In all, about £532m was spent for remarkably little gain.
Six other pop-up centres were meant to alleviate pressures around England as hospitalisations for Covid-19 cases rose rapidly. But while the Nightingales may have sent a “message of hope”, as Prince Charles said when he opened the first one, the overall scheme was a costly mistake. Manchester’s treated about 100 people with Covid; Exeter’s had 29 patients this month. Bristol and Harrogate have provided an overflow service for other patients and services. But Nightingales in Birmingham and Sunderland treated no one at all. In all, about £532m was spent for remarkably little gain.
I can think of many reasons they could have been used for, and still can. If there is 4 million people waiting for treatment, and we believe what Matt Hancock says about there being no shortage of staff / or there's been a great take up of nurses joining the NHS then that must be the way forward to clearing the 4 million, unless Matt is telling pories again. Noooooooo