T We do not have, nor do we want the infrastructure for any more people.
The NHS crisis (if indeed there really is one) is caused by there being far too many fecking people in this country. Same reason for our roads being overcrowded. Same reason for the apparent housing crisis.
This country is FULL and has been for a number of years. We do not have, nor do we want the infrastructure for any more people.
I don't perceive the problem as being about a shortage of GPs. It seems to me to be partly about the difficulties of getting a GP appointment at short notice ... "there's nothing available until Thursday, I'm afraid". Once you've heard that two or three times, you are much more likely to pack yourself off to an A&E unit straight away. How many GP surgeries require patients who want an appointment "today" to phone at start of business and run the risk of finding themselves at number 22 in a queue of phone calls waiting to be answered?
The NHS crisis (if indeed there really is one) is caused by there being far too many fecking people in this country. Same reason for our roads being overcrowded. Same reason for the apparent housing crisis.
This country is FULL and has been for a number of years. We do not have, nor do we want the infrastructure for any more people.
As you say there is enough GP'S around, it's whether they want to work longer hours.
My local surgery has three days in the week where it's open till eight and has a triage service, where a dedicated doc can call you back at home within one hour.
Also as you have said it's difficult to get an appointment when you want one, but I have learnt, when they ask is it urgent, you say yes and miraculously they find an opening.
Same as my GP, it's a way of stopping time wasters and no shows, only problem is I have no desire to tell some nosey receptionist what is wrong with me, I tell them to mind there own business, it's confidential or that I think I have the Black Plague, that usually shuts them up.
The bizarre thing about A&E units is that they deal with accidents AND emergencies. Why should someone with a broken ankle have to be triaged in competition with someone who has had a cardiac arrest? Separate units for injuries and health emergencies surely make sense, no? And pharmacists should be treating earache.
I'm a little bit tired of people pinning everything on immigrants. It really is a false flag. You're looking at a net population growth of 0.6%- about 300,000 people a year. This takes into account births and immigration and at this level, it's fairly manageable.
The big issue here is capacity, but population growth is inevitable with or without immigration. Our hospitals, on the most part, were designed for the population as it was decades ago. We badly need to make use of our tax receipts (and if need be, increase them by going after avoidance), including tax raised by migrants (who make a net contribution) and invest in our infrastructure and prepare for our future, which will involve population growth regardless of the sort of immigration controls you put in.
That's not to say I'm against controls on immigration, by the way, clearly they are needed but it really is simplistic to blame everything on immigration, and the longer we fixate ourselves on it, the worse off we will be, because we're ignoring the real issues.
The bizarre thing about A&E units is that they deal with accidents AND emergencies. Why should someone with a broken ankle have to be triaged in competition with someone who has had a cardiac arrest?
He was a bit full of himself, but I don't see how he can blamed for the NHS. Not sure we need more than one either.Is the lack of available GP's to blame for NHS crisis?