Hi folks this is a very good topic, and I would like to give my reasons for not penalising our doctors or nurses.
1 - when maggie was in power, along came a set of people who were called Financial Advisors, who peddled and mis-sold endowment policies which caused havoc with ordinary peoples future nest eggs.
2 - At the same time the then government decided to close all of the mines, shipyards and most heavy industry which caused millions of working class people to be thrown on the dole. and they were then retrained in the "service" areas.
3 - then came the misselling of endowment policies which were taken out to purchase a house(home)and withe the promises that on maturity the house would be paid and a few thousands for your nest egg.
4 - Then the pensions fiasco, in which many many people from all walks of life lots thousands of pounds out of their pension pot due to company pension holidays and a high take from the government of the day.
5 - so what are people advised to do, "put your money into property as it value would exponentially. and what do we have again Negative Equity.
6 - The banks through there being no or little regulation in their affairs, were near!! to bankruptcy andhad to be bailed out by the government.
7 - Massive bonuses to the elite of the heads of corporations, banks and businesses etc,
I could write a book on the inadequacies and predudices that prevail in this country today, and if our forefathers could see what they struggled and fought for being eroded they would turn in their graves.
8 - We should not penalise our profesional staff in the NHS and we should seek to provide them with every pound needed to make the service as 100% as possible. and it should be brought to everyones attention that we are all in the queue of life and god forbid that we do not follow the situation that exists in the USA
This is my opinion
Hi Mrs Sheila,
Despite my previous comments, I do hold the majority of medics in high esteem. OK, some enter the profession because they want "a good job", not because they want to "do a good job". But most want to help people.
And then they find their bosses are leaning on them to save money. It takes strength of character to keep your eye on why you chose that profession. I was a civil servant, who was I serving? The general public? My boss who wanted promotion? Or a mandarin looking for a knighthood? Guess which was the easy option?
The problem is finding the middle route. Chuck money at the NHS, and the fat cats will get fatter. Some will trickle down to the foot soldiers, who will also get fatter. But it won't improve the service to the public. That needs facilities like beds and drugs. So don't chuck money at the NHS .... and the fat cats will still get fatter, and services will deteriate.
The NHS is free! No its not, not to anybody paying taxes its not. But some staff seem to regard themselves as doing you a favour. (Er, read my first para above, again.) But because the service appears to be free, you get those that abuse it.
A local bimbo knocked on my door, asked to borrow my phone to call the doctor. I heard her tell the doctor that her baby had been vomiting all day, and would he come to her house. THIS WAS AT QUARTER TO FOUR IN THE AFTERNOON. The surgery opened at four o'clock. The doc told her he would see her immediately, IF she came to the surgery. She looked at me. I said I didn't have a baby seat in my car. So she walked the half mile to the surgery.
Sort out the time wasters, and we might get somewhere.
Between 1984 and 2005, I did not make a single appointment to visit my surgery. I had one call out for severe Labyrinthitis (sp?), a broken collar bone, and an appedix removal. My GP did not even know we had children, they were never ill. But now they have a grip on me and keep calling me in for check-ups. Doh!
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