Spring is here!
©Am Ang Zhang 2012
The Mayo of the United Kingdom
The year was 1978 and I was employed by one of the fourteen Regional Health Authorities. The perceived wisdom was to allow consultants freedom from Area and District control that may not be of benefit to the NHS as a whole so the local Area or District Health did not hold our contracts. Even for matters like Annual Leave and Study Leave we dealt directly with RHA.
©Am Ang Zhang 2010
Back to the patient:
Here is an extract from my book The Cockroach Catcher: Chapter 29 The Power of Prayers
Medical Training at its best:
Those
doctors that grew up here may not know but those of us from overseas
looked forward to coming for our specialist training in this country. A
number of us went to the US and they did well too.
There was little doubt that for many the years of training in the top hospitals here will guarantee them nice top jobs in Hong Kong or the rest of theCommonwealth. It must indeed be a relief to Her Majesty that Prince Philip did well in one of the top hospitals in England if not the World.
There was little doubt that for many the years of training in the top hospitals here will guarantee them nice top jobs in Hong Kong or the rest of theCommonwealth. It must indeed be a relief to Her Majesty that Prince Philip did well in one of the top hospitals in England if not the World.
Do we really want to continue to believe that Hospitals are not necessary?
What
many politicians may not know is that pride in what we do is often more
important than money or anything else. Our pride is one sure way to
ensure quality of practice.
Why?
We provide World Class Medicine without trying. A
quote from a fellow blogger, Dr. No.
Do we really want to take that away now? Years of
heartless re-organisation has left many of us dedicated
doctors disillusioned. Many young ones have left. Poorly trained doctors
that have no right to be practising medicine now even have jobs in some of
these well known hospitals.
Can we continue to practise World Class Medicine
even if we wanted to?
Here is a reprint:
Tuesday, May 24, 2011
NHS 1978: Hope, Faith & Supermarket
It is
well known that we as doctors do not have all the answers and we can
only base our diagnosis and treatment on current knowledge.
Patients
or their relatives are used to trust the judgement of doctors and
always hope for a better or even miraculous outcome. Their faith in
their doctor is often supplemented by their own religious faith.
David Cameron is no different and he has stated so on record.
I am not here to analyse his faith.
I am here to re-tell one of the stories of hope and faith I have experienced as a very junior consultant in 1978:
The Mayo of the United Kingdom
The year was 1978 and I was employed by one of the fourteen Regional Health Authorities. The perceived wisdom was to allow consultants freedom from Area and District control that may not be of benefit to the NHS as a whole so the local Area or District Health did not hold our contracts. Even for matters like Annual Leave and Study Leave we dealt directly with RHA.
Referrals
were accepted from GPs and we could refer to other specialists within
the Region or to the any of the major London Centres of excellence. Many
of us were trained by some of these centres and we respected them. They
were the Mayos and Clevelands and Hopkins of the United Kingdom.
Money or funding never came into it and we truly had a most integrated service.
We used to practice real, good and economical medicine.
We used to practice real, good and economical medicine.
The unusual cases:
Child
Psychiatry like many other disciplines in medicine does not follow
rules and do not function like supermarkets. Supermarkets have very
advanced systems to track customer demands and they can maximise profit
and keep cost down. In medicine we do sometimes get unusual cases that
would have been a nightmare for the supermarket trained managers.
As
it is so difficult to plan for the unusual it will become even more
difficult if the present government had its way (and there is every sign
that they will), not only will the reformed NHS find it difficult to
cope with the unusual, it will find it extremely difficult to cope with emergencies.
Supermarket:
Why?
These cases cost money and in the new world of Supermarket Styled NHS,
they have to be dealt with! For that reason, not all NHS hospitals will
be failed by Monitor. Some will need to be kept in order that someone could then deal with unprofitable cases. They will be the new fall guys.
But supermarkets can get things wrong too. In Spain after the Christmas of 2009 there were 4 million unsold hams.
Back to the patient:
Would my patient be dealt with in the same way in 2011?
GP to Paediatrician: 13 year old with one stiff arm. Seen the same day.
Paediatrician to me: ? Psychosis or even Catatonia.
Seen same day and admitted to Paediatric Ward, DGH.
Child Psychiatrist to Gynaecologist: ? Pregnancy or tumour. Still the same day.
Gynaecologist to Radiologist: Unlikely to be pregnant, ? Ovarian cyst.
Radiologist (Hospital & no India based): Tell tale tooth: Teratoma.
Gynaecologist: Operation on emergency basis with Paediatric Anaethetics Consultant. Still Day 1.
Patient unconscious and transferred to GOS on same day. Seen by various Professors.
Patient later transferred to Queen’s Square (National Hospital for Nervous Diseases),
Seen by more Professors.
Regained consciousness after 23 days.
Eventually transferred back to local Hospital.
None of the Doctor to Doctor decisions need to be referred to managers.
We did not have Admission Avoidance then.
How
is the new Consortia going to work out the funding and how are the
three Foundation Trust Hospitals going to work out the costs.
The danger is that the patient may not even get to see the first Specialist: Paediatrician not to say the second one: me.
Not to mention the operation etc. and the transfer to the Centres of excellence.
Here is an extract from my book The Cockroach Catcher: Chapter 29 The Power of Prayers
…………Something else was going on here, and I was not happy
because I did not know what it was. I was supposed to know and I
generally did. After all I was the consultant now.
Thank
goodness she could breathe without assistance. That was the first thing
I noticed. I saw mother in the corner obviously in tears. She asked if
her daughter would be all right. I cannot remember what I said but
knowing myself I could not have said anything too discouraging. But then
I knew I was in tricky territory and it was unlikely to be the
territory of a child psychiatrist.
A good doctor is one who is not afraid to ask for help but he must also know where to ask.
“Get me Great Ormond Street.”
“I already did.”
She is going to be a good doctor.
“Well,
the Regional unit said that they had no beds so I thought I should ring
up my classmate at GOS and she talked to her SR who said “send her
in”.”
Who needs consultants when juniors have that kind of network? This girl will do well.
“Everything
has been set up. The ambulance will be here in about half an hour and
if it is all right I would like to go with her.”
“Yes, you do and thanks a lot.”
I
told mother that we were transferring her daughter to the best
children’s hospital in England if not in the world and the doctor would
stay with her in the ambulance. She would be fine.
“........Ten
years later mother came to see my secretary and left a photo. It was a
photo of her daughter and her new baby. She had been working at the
local bank since she left school, met a very nice man and now she had a
baby. Mother thought I might remember them and perhaps I would be
pleased with the outcome.
"I was very pleased for them too but I would hate for anyone to put faith or god to such a test too often."
David Cameron, if
it was your plan not to have an integrated service, then there is not
much we ordinary people could do except pray. If it was not your
intention, then could you let us have an integrated service! That way
you would not need many accountants and you will save money in doing so.
Just like Mayo Clinic:
“…….Mayo offers proof that when a like-minded group of doctors practice medicine to the very best of their ability—without worrying about the revenues they are bringing in for the hospital, the fees they are accumulating for themselves, or even whether the patient can pay—patients satisfaction is higher, physicians are happier, and the medical bills are lower.”
Just like Mayo Clinic:
“…….Mayo offers proof that when a like-minded group of doctors practice medicine to the very best of their ability—without worrying about the revenues they are bringing in for the hospital, the fees they are accumulating for themselves, or even whether the patient can pay—patients satisfaction is higher, physicians are happier, and the medical bills are lower.”
- Excellent post - and yes, that is exactly how it used to be. World class medicine without even trying - we just did it, because that is what we did, just as the dolphin swims, and the eagle soars. A key, even vital feature was that the doctors looking after their patients did not need to worry about money or managers. They just got on with it. There was no market to get in the way of truly integrated care. Some may point out that 13 year olds with teratomas are rare, and that is true, but what this case shows us, precisely because of its complexity, is just how capable the system was. And most of the time (of course not always), it dealt just as capably with more routine cases. "How is (sic) the new Consortia going to work out the funding and how are the three Foundation Trust Hospitals going to work out the costs." Exactly. And then: who is going to pay for the staff and their time to work out out all those costs and conduct the transactions?
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