Yep. Healthcare is very, very expensive. Because it's delivered by people. General academic consensus is that NHS delivers cost-effectively.
-
-
Concensus is based on utilitarian outcomes which have limits. You end up with a depersonalisation, often oblivious to patients' own values.
1 antwoord 0 retweets 0 vind-ik-leuks -
That can be a problem. How to fix it? Choice and voice appears to have limited traction; markets need expensive spare capacity & management
2 antwoorden 0 retweets 0 vind-ik-leuks -
Avoiding running excessively lean capacity is no bad thing. For elective care, why not publish direct patient feedback after a few months?
1 antwoord 0 retweets 0 vind-ik-leuks -
Agree: NHS acute bed use rates are inefficiently, insanely high. 85% is top of the range for most of the developed world. Maybe the solution
2 antwoorden 0 retweets 0 vind-ik-leuks -
Als antwoord op @HPIAndyCowper @JonMarcStanley en
should be to differentiate between the deserving sick and the undeserving sick?
3 antwoorden 0 retweets 0 vind-ik-leuks -
...to LT elderly care funding, including getting people OUT before funding decisions for LTC are squared. https://www.bowgroup.org/sites/bowgroup.uat.pleasetest.co.uk/files/Jon%20Stanley%20Dilnot%20Bow%20Group%20-%20POS.pdf …
1 antwoord 0 retweets 0 vind-ik-leuks -
This is already done in some areas, its called Discharge to Assess
1 antwoord 1 retweet 1 vind-ik-leuk -
I once saw 20 patients discharged rapidly during a bed crisis, after the chief exec called consultants to do weekend rounds and discharges
1 antwoord 0 retweets 0 vind-ik-leuks -
I've seen a similar number discharged when the hospital CEO told the local council to do its job
1 antwoord 0 retweets 0 vind-ik-leuks
Could not agree more.
Het laden lijkt wat langer te duren.
Twitter is mogelijk overbelast of ondervindt een tijdelijke onderbreking. Probeer het opnieuw of bekijk de Twitter-status voor meer informatie.