Spanish Eyes wrote: » Last place anyone would want to be is A+E. Honestly. Charge everyone for going there. Sorry it has really come to this.
iamwhoiam wrote: » Its a €100 to attend A and E without a GP referral
Graysen Green Barbecue wrote: » Not with Medical Cards. 44% of people have one.
mrmorgan wrote: » I was in Tallaght recently and a woman was waiting there for 15 hours with a chest infection..... a bloody chest infection and she was going mad that she wasn't being seen!! I actually told her, people like her are the reason that the waiting times are so long (well they kind of are) her excuse was she couldnt get an app with her GP and needed meds to which I replied "is he the only GP in Dublin"... the world is full of idiots I am afraid.
iamwhoiam wrote: » Most GPs in Dublin are not taking new patients on their books . Nor would they see a randomer with no appointment .
Tails142 wrote: » Maybe the HSE could issue out salt lamps next year to at risk groups too, might help with the lemsip to keep the numbers down
iamwhoiam wrote: » People are very quick to blame the patient instead of blaming the HSE for the dreadful management of A and E’s There should be walk in clinics around the citys easing the burden on A and E
angel eyes 2012 wrote: » There are a number of after hours GP services available in the Dublin area and you don't have to be a patient of a particular GP to attend.
Chiparus wrote: » Ambulatory patients are not those on trolleys, you could open a load of walk in clinics and it would not make any difference to the trolley count. These are sick patients who need inpatient care.
Snickers Man wrote: » The 6:1 news on RTE yesterday (Monday 6th Jan 2020) led with the by now regular news item from Fergal Bowers, RTE's medical correspondent, that there were "record numbers (760) of patients on trolleys in our acute hospitals." Usual over-wrought description of chaos: Ambulances backed up for hours waiting to unload patients into gridlocked A&E departments; non emergency surgery procedures cancelled; the usual litany of interviewees: spokesperson from the INMO, soundbite from De Minister, outraged patients/passersby outside hospitals tut tutting and saying how the "whole world's in a state of chassis". And just in case you didn't get enough of Fun-time Fergie, there he was back in the RTE news office offering some insightful analysis of where it's all going wrong. Verbatim transcript:Interviewer: "What is causing the problem to be at such a record levels this year?"Fergal Bowers: "Well this is traditionally one of the busiest weeks of the year for the country's acute hospitals. It's the post Christmas/New Year surge which is predictable. People have been socialising, gathering in large gatherings and that aids the spread of influenza and colds. People may have put off attending a doctor over the festive season and are now turning up at hospitals. While the flu has peaked it it is going to continue to affect the hospital system over the coming weeks. ....... We have an aging and growing population. The capacity of the system is not sufficient to cope with this surge that we are seeing." Are you f***ing kidding me? People go to the A&E departments of acute hospitals because they have a few sniffles??? What the hell is wrong with saving themselves a lot of trouble (and the health service a lot of scarce resource) and just going down to the local pharmacy for some rudimentary over the counter medicine? Like a Lemsip?? Can staff at A&E not be empowered to tell people who are clearly ill but not dangerously so to go home, tuck up warm and have a hot whiskey with a nice squeeze of lemon inside? By being indulgently nice to someone who shows up with a shiver and a temperature we are being necessarily nasty to genuinely acute patients who may have suffered a car accident or a fall or an illness that necessitates hospital treatment. Think of it this way: if your elderly mother HAD to go to hospital for an important procedure or because she had been diagnosed as seriously ill and had to wait for up to seven hours in the ambulance at the loading bay because some indulgent jerk ahead of her only needed a cough bottle, what would you think? I know. Some of you are going to say I'm "Victim blaming" but I am only going by what RTE's esteemed Health Correspondent offered as his "analysis" of the problem. Colds and flu....in ACUTE hospitals?? GTF outta here. Literally.
Chiparus wrote: » Eh No, waiting times are so long because there is nowhere to see ambulatory patients generally.