Category Archives: Health Management

Interesting snippets on getting adequate medical care

Last year I wrote a blog “Women’s bodies shamed in medicine”, (1) on how women are treated both as doctors and as patients, and how their position as doctors has improved out of all recognition in the last fifty years. There … Continue reading

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A brave new world of lower waiting lists in the NHS?

Thank goodness, the new government is trying very hard to speed up the process of diagnosis and treatment to reduce waiting lists in the NHS, and I think they are on the right track. Allowing patients to book their own … Continue reading

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Women’s bodies shamed in medicine.

It is said that historically women have had a raw deal in Western systems of medicine. Women’s bodies have been routinely sexualized or their characteristics ignored or shamed. In a recent book1 a leading cancer doctor in the US, Dr … Continue reading

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Can the NHS survive?

While going about my normal life, fitting in appointments for dentists and  eye tests amongst shopping and hair appointments, I sometimes think about the changes in provision for these first two since I retired from clinical practice  over ten years … Continue reading

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Apps for Women’s Health

The news that safe abortion is likely to be illegal in the USA, in vast swathes of the Midwest and south, is chilling.  The right to control what happens in one’s own body is a basic human right.    In … Continue reading

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Covid-19 – lockdowns go on and on. What should we do?

The decision to impose a second lockdown in England is polarising people to a much greater extent than it did in March, as it seems obvious that this virus is not going away and we are going to have to … Continue reading

Posted in Coronavirus, Health Delivery, Health Management, Health Policy, hospital beds, old age | Tagged , , , | 4 Comments

So who really gets really sick with Coronavirus?

It is still very early days of this new life for all of us. There are such a lot of changes – home working, loads of leisure time to fill, catching up with friends we have neglected due to busy … Continue reading

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The real meaning of Coronavirus

Well, we are in a mess. We have an ordinary sort of virus (whose closest relative is the common cold), which mostly causes a severe flu, from which most people recover without any complications. Admittedly it has a death rate … Continue reading

Posted in Coronavirus, Health Delivery, Health Management, hospital beds, Medicine, old age | Tagged , , , , , , , | 1 Comment

Virtual Beds anyone?

The current crisis in the NHS is wearingly familiar. There is talk of patients waiting, and occasionally dying, on trolleys before being admitted, ambulances waiting for hours outside hospitals with paramedics before A&E have the space to take over their … Continue reading

Posted in Europe, Health Delivery, Health Management, Health Policy, hospital beds, Medicine, old age | Tagged , , | Leave a comment

Breast surgeon guilty of doing unnecessary operations.

How would you feel if you had had an operation or treatment that you thought was necessary and then found out that you never needed this treatment? If you were told you had cancer but you never had it? Pretty … Continue reading

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