Wanderer78 wrote: » Health care systems are highly complex beasts, I'd imagine every system on the planet is problematic, and I'd say ours will always be problematic
Mantis Toboggan wrote: Nothing will change as long as the HSE remains, it's not fit for purpose. Needs to be scraped.
Wanderer78 wrote: » Scrapping a major body such as the HSE would probably introduce more chaos, it's very easy to say such a thing, but actually doing it.....
Mantis Toboggan wrote: Well then nothing will change, its a bottomless pit in terms of throwing money at it.
C0N0R wrote: This may sound rather ignorant but I’m not currently in the country and don’t have any relations that are struggling to cope with the health service either patients or doctors/nurses, but what are the fundamental issues with the health service? And why can’t they be fixed, or how can they be fixed? An answer without it just saying people waiting on trolleys would be appreciated if possible.
BluePlanet wrote: » This thread is a waste. We already have a plan called SlainteCare that all parties have backed in principle. We just need the political will, and capital to implement over the next decade.
Wanderer78 wrote: » Very similar in other countries I'd imagine, keeping people alive seems to be important across the world
Mantis Toboggan wrote: Outdated technology, poor systems and a lack of joined up thinking. A unionised workforce who resist change on a daily basis. Nothing will change as long as the current system remains.
Mantis Toboggan wrote: » Nothing will change as long as the HSE remains, it's not fit for purpose. Needs to be scraped.
RobAMerc wrote: » I worked for the HSE for 3 years - what a total basket case, everyone bar non front line staff need to go and the whole organisation be rebooted I watched as senior managers literally spent the whole day txting friends and drinking tea. Other senior managers hired multiple "aides" in order to use up budget and then left the aides watching youtube all day coz there was nothing for them to do. I met an old acquaintance who was a senior manager in the Health Board, she told me she had never been removed when the HSE came in just replaced ! She was left in her post ( pretty much doing nothing ) What people may not understand is the HSE is simply a layer of management smeared over a bunch of fairly autonomous organisations based mainly around specialties. Each of those has in turn its own management structure, and internal organisational structures ( HR, IT etc ) and every one of those (without fail) have one purpose - keep themselves in a job by keeping the HSE out. The patient first ? My hole. The HSE has 0 control over them and only really has the ability to gain some control when they have some leverage over them - such as a crisis. Slainte Care is a pipe dream.( designed to line the pockets of the consultancies who helped define it ) The HSE will achieve nothing until the whole organisation is disbanded and a government with balls tackles the whole poisonous lot.
Mantis Toboggan wrote: » Yeah but our system is top heavy, too many chiefs and not enough Indians. People in offices on huge salaries twiddling their thumbs with little to no qualifications. Drafted in from the old health board system. Outdated technology, poor systems and a lack of joined up thinking. A unionised workforce who resist change on a daily basis. Nothing will change as long as the current system remains.
[Deleted User] wrote: » If there is a grand coalition that they're talking about it might be an opportunity to dismantle the HSE..
quodec wrote: » So how did SF think they'd solve the health crisis then?