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Economics - National Health Service 6

Former NHS staff have revealed how doctors and nurses get their own back on rude patients. One nurse admits fitting a catheter to a man who didn't need one as revenge for him pinching their bottoms. Other tactics include 'forgetting' to give an anaesthetic and deliberately making injections painful by using the wrong size needle. Medical staff have also found a range of objects found inside patients during internal examinations, including turnips, potatoes, mobile phones and light bulbs.


The Department of Health's statistics show 1,054,700 people in England were waiting for in-patient treatment at NHS hospitals in June 2002 - a rise of nearly 17,000 which represents a rise of 16,900 or 1.6% between June 2001 and June 2002.


An al-Qa’ida terrorist held in Britain had NHS hospital treatment. Suspected mass murderer Ibrahim Eidarous - held in Broadmoor while battling extradition to the US - was sent to Wexham Park hospital in Slough, Berks, for cancer tests. Eidarous and two associates - one a Saudi Arabian said to be Osama bin Laden’s top henchman in Britain - were wanted over the devastating 1998 bombings of American embassies in Nairobi, Kenya, and Dar es Salaam, Tanzania which left 223 people dead and more than 4,000 wounded. The trio had been fighting extradition for three years and had run up a legal bill of more than £1MILLION bankrolled by British taxpayers.


A patient was diagnosed with inoperable pancreatic cancer at Weston General Hospital in Weston-super-Mare, Somerset, after suffering several weeks of severe abdominal pain, and without treatment had some months to live. He resigned from his post as property manager for a retail company the next day, and decided to take his family on what he thought would be their last holiday together. He spent £4,500 on a two-week cruise to South America and the Caribbean - which included a bill for more than £1,000 on life insurance. However, when he returned, the hospital told him that further tests had revealed that he did not have pancreatic cancer. The cause of his abdominal pain, for which he was being treated with morphine, had still not been diagnosed. He then faced a four-month wait for an operation to remove a lesion on his lung, which doctors had originally decided not to treat because they thought he was going to die.


A lapdancer who earned £500 a night was given a boob operation - on the NHS.


Hospital managers are set to receive 30% bonuses that would take their annual pay close to £200,000 which would see senior managers taking home more than many consultants. London's Guy's and St Thomas's Hospital chief executive Dr Jonathan Michael reportedly earned £171,000 in 2001-2002. Trust chairwoman Patricia Mobley defended his salary saying, "We need high-quality chief executives. These people are rare. You won't get them if you don't pay them."


More managers than doctors were hired by the NHS in 2002, new Government figures have revealed. The number of bureaucrats soared by 17.8% with 4,900 extra managers joining the health service. That compared with the 4,000 extra doctors employed by the NHS, according to a workforce census. NHS staff increased by 57,808 (almost 5%) to a total of 1.2 million. But the BMA said the Government was not on course to meet targets for doctors set out in the NHS Plan.

 

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