by cromwell » 30 Dec 2020, 10:54
Over the last 30 or 40 years the NHS, under the guise of being made more "businesslike" and "efficient", has been stripped of beds and facilities.
NHS beds in 1989 299,000, beds in 2019 141,000.
We now have fewer beds per head of population than we did before the NHS was actually formed.
Hence victim blaming phrases like "bed blockers". We don't have enough beds, we haven't had for years.
I'd like to see some stats on how many front line nurses and doctors we have. Certainly in the old days when nurses learned on the job rather than on a degree course there would have been more manpower available in hospitals.
The Nightingales were gesture politics, a stampeded response to a shieking press. "We don't have the beds! We don't have the ventilators! Scandalous!".
No, and we didn't have the staff either.
We need massive NHS reform. Analysis of staff; how many are employed? What are they employed doing? Analysis of work done - who is ding it? Are the Trusts just replicating what one organisation could do? Are we funding the NHS correctly?
I doubt it will happen though.
"Facts do not cease to exist because they are ignored" - Aldous Huxley