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40 votes
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The macroeconomic cost of the UK's Conservative government
5 votes -
Painting stolen from Chatsworth House forty-five years ago discovered at auction
12 votes -
You can’t call a company Scorpio Bastardo [in the UK]
7 votes -
‘Baby Reindeer’s’ alleged ‘real Martha’ sues Netflix, demanding at least $170 million in damages
16 votes -
Autonomy co-founder Mike Lynch cleared of fraud [in $11bn Hewlett-Packard takeover]
4 votes -
Do not orient your map when using with a compass
8 votes -
Micheal Nyman Band - Synchronising (live in Poland) (1995)
4 votes -
Blacksmiths are reconstructing a Viking ship to better understand the secrets of the navigation of Scandinavian warriors a thousand years ago
16 votes -
The repressive, authoritarian soul of “Thomas the Tank Engine & Friends”
40 votes -
UK's NHS computer problems put patients at risk of harm
5 votes -
Taskmaster Series 17, Episode 1 - 'Grappling with my life' | Full episode
26 votes -
How Mary-Kay Wilmers became Britain’s most influential editor [2019]
5 votes -
UK Prime Minister Rishi Sunak pitches mandatory national service at eighteen
37 votes -
Norwich City have appointed FC Nordsjælland manager Johannes Hoff Thorup as their new head coach on a three-year contract
3 votes -
The forgotten Roman roads
9 votes -
Pigeons in the Arctic: Part III: Sir John Ross’s 1850-51 search for the lost Franklin Bay expedition
6 votes -
WASPI [Women Against State Pension Inequality] Campaign's legal action is morally wrong
3 votes -
'I was misidentified as shoplifter by facial recognition tech'
59 votes -
Kyren Wilson feels Helsinki would be ideal destination for major snooker tournament – invitational event over the weekend saw Finnish baize fans flock to the city
3 votes -
Matt Berry on comedy, career and "What We Do In the Shadows" [2021]
21 votes -
It is the spiciest rivalry in track and field. After months of trash talking and bravado, Britain's Josh Kerr and Norway's Jakob Ingebrigtsen face off for the first time in 2024.
8 votes -
The Canterbury Tales, or, how technology changes the way we speak
14 votes -
Inside the peculiar world of Farming Simulator eSports
27 votes -
UK Prime Minister Rishi Sunak announces a 4th July general election
35 votes -
Today is the UK courts decision day on Julian Assange's extradition to the US
30 votes -
We still don’t know how to talk about Amy Winehouse. The expectations and perception around the ‘Back to Black’ movie reflect a sort of mean grief over the singer persisting to this day.
17 votes -
British Library on why it kept it real in communication about ransomware attack
9 votes -
Yorkshire crafts: Drystone wallers
14 votes -
Chinchilla - 1:5 (Lyric video, 2024)
2 votes -
Spending an afternoon in the Sizewell [nuclear reactor] control-room simulator
7 votes -
Edinburgh's Beltane Fire Festival, rooted in ancient Gaelic traditions, heralds the beginning of summer and celebrates the cycles of nature. The vibrant event now draws over 8,000 attendees each year.
10 votes -
The woman who built up Edinburgh's army of street stitchers
14 votes -
A British nurse was found guilty of killing seven babies. Did she do it?
19 votes -
Switzerland's Nemo wins Eurovision as UK comes 18th
19 votes -
Medieval historian and game developer, Jason Kingsley CBE, reacts to Manor Lords
12 votes -
Remnants of a legendary typeface have been rescued from the River Thames
44 votes -
Spending cuts are often false economies that end up costing society dearly
16 votes -
NHS is broken - also, did my Pa have a stroke?
Strap in folks, this is a fun one. Yesterday at around midday my almost 75 yr old Pa started feeling extremely fatigued, weak all over, hot and, in his words, very odd. He rang my sister who lives...
Strap in folks, this is a fun one.
Yesterday at around midday my almost 75 yr old Pa started feeling extremely fatigued, weak all over, hot and, in his words, very odd.
He rang my sister who lives 5 minutes away, she got there and immediately called an ambulance. They were there in sub 10 minutes and checked him over. He couldn't even walk in a straight line. They took his blood pressure and it benched 199/98. They said he had a possible stroke and needed to go to A&E (ER for my US friends). Not living more than 10 minutes from the local Medway Hospital (major hospital) they went there. It took 3 hours to get to being triaged. The time was 4:30pm when they're told that the closest Stroke clinic is Maidstone hospital, 40 minutes away at rush hour.
On the way out, they saw the paramedics that had been out to respond and they called ahead to Maidstone Hospital so he was on record. That did nothing. When he got there, it took another 2 hours for them to do another triage, then another 2 to do blood work. Then the stroke unit refused to take him stating that they didn't think it was a stroke. After politely arguing the case my sister had to remind them to do his blood pressure again. At this point it had come down a little. He is still really weak and couldn't hold a cuppa without spilling it.
Eventually they relented and did a CT scan. When they checked the results they said it wasn't a major stroke but could have been a posterial stroke which wouldn't show. They couldn't do anything else there and should go back to Medway. At this point it's midnight. At 1am, my sister is checking my dad back into Medway A&E. 1.5hrs later they're through reception and sitting in waiting room 3 with 29 other people. I headed down at 5am to relieve my sister. Between 5am and 11am they took his blood pressure twice and we waited in the waiting area with everyone, my usually fit and healthy dad in a wheelchair. He's exhausted, had no sleep and was genuinely scared, which he never is.
It took until 2pm to see a doctor and we had to put in an official complaint to the nurses liaison team about the handling to even get that far. An hour later and then he saw a consultant who gave him a thorough check.
Concerned, the doctor said he wants an MRI scan performed, but to do this he was being made an outpatient and sent home. He would get an appointment and come back in the next few days. Why? Because if they admitted him he would join the inpatient side and they have 1 MRI scanner. He may not have been seen for up to 2 weeks and would simply be taking up a bed. As an outpatient the team has 3 MRI scanners and he will be seen quicker, plus less likely to pick up an infection from the hospital. It took another hour and a half after this, plus chasing the team to get them to take bloods and remove his cannula so he could go home.
Sorry for the long read, but how backward and broken is this system?
They still don't know if it was a stroke or a brain degenerative issue, all we know is he is home, cannot look after himself or my disabled mother and the whole situation sucks.
34 votes -
Britain's Foreign Secretary David Cameron, in Kyiv, promises Ukraine aid for 'as long as it takes'
18 votes -
An extreme body modification website made nearly £300,000 showing its subscribers male castration
11 votes -
UK becomes first country to outlaw easily guessable default passwords on connected devices
37 votes -
I Am Arrows - Green Grass (2010)
3 votes -
Hundreds of UK Border Force officers begin four-day strike today
7 votes -
Ireland plans to send asylum seekers back to UK under emergency law
14 votes -
The world's oldest hat shop that fitted James Bond
4 votes -
UK asylum seekers will be deported to Rwanda
18 votes -
Critical psychiatry and the political backlash against disabilities: a closer look at James Davies
11 votes -
Lies, confections, distortions: how the right made London the most vilified place in Britain
9 votes -
Remembering the time Throbbing Gristle played at a private school (2020)
14 votes