"Premium Patients" and the septuagenarian NHS: a rant by Julia Jones
My partner Francis has just emerged from a brief stay in
hospital to have a hip replacement. It’s one of those blessed operations, like
cataract surgery, that have become almost a rite of passage for us over-sixties.
“Oh I’ve had three of those,” people say and one looks for the extra bulge that
has turned them into a tripod. A successful hip replacement wipes out months of
debilitating pain, sleeplessness, inability to walk up or down stairs without
howling agony. Living in a country where such a major operation is relatively
freely available is an absolute blessing. So thank you, fellow citizens, for
continuing to fund our NHS, 70 this year ... and with aging problems of its own.
As we baby-boomers move through the system that is almost our
coeval, we block beds, stretch resources and look likely to show our
appreciation of our lifelong free-at-the-time-of-need health care by continuing
to live longer and longer. (Sorry, everyone.) Francis was among the increasing
number of NHS funded patients who are diverted into the private system for
these “elective” operations. The NHS eye operations I had
last year were described by one sassy young surgeon as my “lifestyle” choices – pandering
to my self-indulgent wish to be able to continue to see, rather as Francis
would greedily like to be able to walk, sit, lie down, sleep... (Sorry again?)
He had a well-equipped single room in this nice private hospital but we were put properly
in our place by the visiting arrangements.
I wish I’d taken a photo of the notice in this hospital reception. Here’s the
website version, copied verbatim.
NHS Patients
Lots of noise and groups of people can cause upset for some patients, as
such we request that the following visiting hours be observed 2pm
to 4pm and 6pm to 8pm. We also ask that there are no
more than two visitors at the bedside at any time and that all
visitors report to the ward reception first, so that we can ensure visits do
not disturb patient care.
Premium Care Patients
Friends and relatives are welcome to visit at any reasonable time of the
day before 9pm. We ask that all visitors report to the ward
reception first, so that we can ensure visits do not disturb patient care.
Francis and I arrived just before 7 am on the morning of his operation and
sneaked past the ward reception, which was empty. He'd been told that I was only “allowed” to drop him at the main entrance and then I should leave. “She can’t come down
to the ward, you know.” But I came anyway and sat quietly in the corner of his single room, not upsetting anyone, I hoped, with my wild NHS-funded propensity to riot and to party.
The first nurse who arrived asked Francis (quite correctly) if he minded
talking in front of "this lady”. When he confirmed that this was okay she
seemed pleased to let me learn how to help with the surgical stockings – this would
after all be one of my duties for the next six weeks (though no one from the hospital had actually asked me if I was available and willing to do this). Next to drop in was the
surgeon. Did he mind me being there? He
looked mildly surprised. “Not at all. It’s rather helpful. I need to be going
through the issues of risk and consent again.” The anaesthetist was similarly
friendly and I hoped that I justified my presence by mentioning how difficult the "intubation" had been when Francis had had a previous operation at this same
hospital several years ago. (There wasn’t anything recorded
in his notes.)
Francis, of course, could have managed all of this alone
(except for the stockings) but where was the harm in me keeping him company so early in the morning?
Why the blatant unfriendliness of the phone call and the notices? Thousands of our contemporaries may be flooding though
the healthcare system to have hip replacements but, for each of us the first time is an individual experience, in which we are likely to have invested great hopes, but about which we might
well be privately scared.
And being scared has a practical impact. When Francis and
other patients were in the recovery room later that day there was a man in great distress, trying to pull out his cannulas, shouting and crying, completely confused, needing the attention of several staff members to keep him restrained and safe. Perhaps he’d
simply had "a bad trip" (as we might have said in our unregenerate 1960s and 1970s) more likely he had dementia. A blog on the Johns Campaign site this week confirms that many people living with dementia are unable to have
their pre-booked operations when the day comes because they are already too frightened to
be anaesthetised. Many more people living with dementia, especially those having hip repairs, suffer
post-operative delirium. Delirium is a hospital-stay-lengthener (bed-blocker!) and a
patient-life-shortener (that's premature death, to you and me). .
People as old as I am (b 1954) can remember what was like waking up
after an operation as a child without the reassurance of a parent present. An
anaesthetist friend a little older than me can remember the
difference it made to her job when parents were first involved to support
their frightened children. She was one of the first professionals to support John’s Campaign as Nicci Gerrard and I attempt to ensure that our
parents have the same opportunity for loving companionship through hospital
admissions that they obtained for us so long ago. The hospital where Francis was being treated
boasted two dedicated parent-child rooms but made no provision at all for patients
with dementia. Perhaps they assumed they
wouldn’t have any? Yet, unless they were NHS cherry-picking (which their website strenuously denies) they should expect approximately 20% of their elective joint replacement
patients to have at least mild cognitive impairment (MCI). In a hospital performing
emergency surgery the % soars (it's up to 80% of the over 65s).
But let’s return to hospital as a place of rest and recuperation
as well as treatment. My family make it a running joke that I only signed up
for my four eye operations during 2016-2017 as an excuse to lie in bed and read
– actually it was so I would still be
able to read, which without the brilliance of the Moorfields surgeons who
repaired macular holes in both eyes (yup, age-related once again) I would no
longer be able to do. Closer to personal survival than “lifestyle” i m o. This was day-case surgery; rest and recuperation
took place at home. When I spent a week as an inpatient in my local hospital
with a badly broken leg a few years ago, I waved away most offers of visits in order to keep up
the three-book-a-day average that, for me, constitutes a perfect holiday. I’m
sure my leg healed the better for it.
Francis entered this hospital with a nicely topped-up Kindle, a
phone-full of audio books and the inclination and mental capacity to enjoy them. Restricted visiting was not going to be a
problem for him – apart from the implicit insult that we NHS types need
corralling into 2 hour slots as we can’t be trusted to behave with proper consideration for others. In fact it was the hospital itself that consistently interrupted
his rest: a bewildering procession of nurses, therapists, doctors, pharmacists
and “hostesses” came in and out of his room, usually without introduction, scarcely ever the same face twice and
seemingly with little internal communication or access to his notes. Some knocked as they entered and closed the door behind them: others didn't. Nevertheless they were all of them essential and dedicated to the single aim of getting him fit enough
to return home and crank up that Kindle whilst continuing with the exercise
regime and trying to keep our relationship in good repair over the next six
weeks as we struggle with those stockings. They succeeded and we’re happy – and yes, fellow citizens, we're very very grateful.
Yet what if Francis had been that poor chap shouting in the
recovery room, what if he’d been one of the 1-in-5 who will already be living with MCI when the pain of arthritis urges them to consider a hip replacement? “People
with cognitive impairment should receive the same standards of and access to
healthcare as people without cognitive impairment.” (This is a quote from a draft document setting new standards in anaesthetics. I can't cite it as it's not yet published.) I believe access and provision need to be a
little better than the norm for people with cognitive impairment. Dementia is a disability, like vision loss. Equality and human rights legislation
surely require that special arrangements should be made for these citizens' access?
I did check whether an NHS patient with cognitive impairment
could be upgraded to “premium” status in that private hospital -- and their family
carers therefore entitled to visit without restriction -- but no. Currently “open visiting” is only related to the funding source not the individual need. I haven't named the hospital as I'm hoping, when their position is pointed out to them, that they will change.
Meanwhile. here’s a bit of my favourite reading – probably not on your
Kindle, though it probably should be: it's the NHS Constitution.
The NHS belongs to
the people.
It is there to
improve our health and wellbeing, supporting us to keep mentally and physically
well, to get better when we are ill and, when we cannot fully recover, to stay
as well as we can to the end of our lives. It works at the limits of science –
bringing the highest levels of human knowledge and skill to save lives and
improve health. It touches our lives at times of basic human need, when care
and compassion are what matter most.
The
NHS is founded on a common set of principles and values that bind together the
communities and people it serves – patients and public – and the staff who work
for it.
I know I've said this before but this is a document we should ALL read. Here are its principles:
1. The NHS provides a comprehensive service, available to all
1. The NHS provides a comprehensive service, available to all
2. Access to NHS services is based on clinical need, not an individual’s ability to pay
3. The NHS aspires to the highest standards of excellence and professionalism
4. The patient will be at the heart of everything the NHS does
5. The NHS works across organisational boundaries
6. The NHS is committed to providing best value for taxpayers’ money
7. The NHS is accountable to the public, communities and patients that it serves
and its values: Working together for patients: Patients come first in everything we do. We fully involve patients, staff, families, carers, communities, and professionals inside and outside the NHS. We put the needs of patients and communities before organisational boundaries.
Respect and dignity: We value every person – whether patient, their families or carers, or staff – as an individual, respect their aspirations and commitments in life, and seek to understand their priorities, needs, abilities and limits.
Commitment to quality of care: We earn the trust placed in us by insisting on quality and striving to get the basics of quality of care – safety, effectiveness and patient experience – right every time. We encourage and welcome feedback from patients, families, carers, staff and the public.
Compassion: We ensure that compassion is central to the care we provide and respond with humanity and kindness to each person’s pain, distress, anxiety or need. We search for the things we can do, however small, to give comfort and relieve suffering. We find time for patients, their families and carers, as well as those we work alongside. We do not wait to be asked, because we care.
Improving lives: We strive to improve health and wellbeing and people’s experiences of the NHS. We cherish excellence and professionalism wherever we find it – in the everyday things that make people’s lives better.
Everyone counts: We maximise our resources for the benefit of the whole community, and make sure nobody is excluded, discriminated against or left behind. We accept that some people need more help, that difficult decisions have to be taken – and that when we waste resources we waste opportunities for others.
As the NHS gets older -- and so do we -- these principles and values matter to us all.
Comments
And, during my stay last year, when I was ill enough to be disorientated, there was no problem with a daughter being with me, just to reassure me while my brain began to function again. And it was so helpful, having someone else there, listening to the same information and making sure we both understood.
There is another side to the hospital's demands that visitors behave themselves (though it shouldn't apply only to NHS patients.)
I have a young friend, probably in her early 30s now, who has had Crohn's disease all her life. This has varied from being mildly annoying to severe, painful, life-threatening illness. She was very ill during her mid-teens when the Crohns was so bad that a section of intestine had to be removed -- then there were complications. She spent a lot of time in hospital.
One day her mother came home from work to find her daughter - who was supposed to be miles away in a hospital bed - asleep on the sofa. Daughter had discharged herself and come home in a taxi. The reason? She was weak, exhausted and ill but unable to get a moment's peace or sleep in the hospital.
She was on a NHS children's ward where other child patients and child visitors were allowed to run up and down shrieking, play noisily with games, turn the tv up loud -- sometimes in the middle of the night. Beds were surrounded by gangs of picnicing families, all chattering loudly over the noise other visitors were making and tramping to and fro, letting heavy doors slam and generally making a constant din.
The nurses did nothing to keep order. As a result, my young friend (after a serious operation) was getting no rest. She had to discharge herself and leave hospital in order to recover.
So I think the notice should say something like: 'Family and visitors welcome at all times provided they recognise that this is a hospital where people are sick and are respectful of all patients' need for quiet and rest.'
Glad you are as offended as I was!
Being in hospital is horrible in itself. It is getting worse. Nurses are flooding away from it. Nurses from abroad are a dying breed. Jeremy Hunt refused to be kicked out, and let's say thanks God - he mighr have been replaced by Gove or Grayling.
Whoops, sorry, Jul - I've replied to your rant with another rant, which wasn't my intention. I hope Francis is better soon, and I hope changing his stockings doesn't put you off him for life!
That anyone can even think like that is appalling.
Rant over. I'm glad Frances is on the mend. x
It was due for December 4th, byt I had a bad cold and it had to be postponed. With all the recent talk of postponing electives, I was in despair, but thankfully, I was given a new appointment for January 14th.
This is normally a very safe operation. However, my femoral artery is not in as good a condition as it was twenty years ago. The op itself went perfectly: the new valve was implanted successfully and I also got an extra which I wasn't expecting - a pacemaker. But then came a piece of cruel luck. As the acatheter was being withdrawn from the artery, something snagged against the artery wall and I had a huge blood loss. The cardio-vascular surgical team had to come in for emergency surgery. They were brilliant, though it took them four hours to stop the blood and seal the artery - and a lot of other things as well, including collapsing a lung. Mercifully, it wll went well, though I was told afterwards that the outome was 50/50. I was unconscious for 24 hours and woke, not on Thursday afternoon as I at first presumed, but Friday evening, to find myself surrounded by family and doctors. Still, I woke up talking, which was a relief to evrybody. Theree was a fear that I might die, have a stroke or brain demage.
This meant I wouldn't be going home on Sunda after all. I had twelve more days in hospital, first in intensive care, then critical care and finally on the cardiac ward This was alarming because even on the cardiac ward I couldn't move much, couldn't walk and found even getting out of bed was a major effort - and as for getting back in... However, I was buoyed up with the memory that I'd had this before, in 1983, with the Harefield bypass. The care was marvellous. I cannot praise the nurses, the physios, the consultants who kept a watchful eye on us all and kept me fully up to date with everything they were doing. And the pharmacist, who explained the reasons behind every one of the beweildereing number of new pills I was givennoew pill I was given
The JR in Oxford is, I think, fortunate as an NHS hospoital because I spent all my ward time in a private room. I enjoyed the peace, but I also longed fo the company. The visiting hours were generous, though, and I had a good stream of family and friends visiting. My experience was entirely good, even though I couldnl wait to get out of the place!
Youn weould have thought that with everyone in a separate room, the place would be peaceful. Not so. There were paients who were really ill and in pain and others who seemed to resent being treated at all. All of them were noisy. especially at night. The night staff were unfailingly kind and courteous to me, but they showed the strain of having to deal with the difficult cases. Yet I was amazed by their attitudes of sympathetic stoicsm in the face of sometimes intense provocation which I don't think I could have put up with. Interestingly, I would say that two-thirds were from Europe and beynd. I'm glad I go through this now, and not two years hence.
Everything I experienced told me that the NHS principles are being fully maintained. I was looked after by professional, uttely competetent peopl. I've been home a month now and getting on well enough, thougnsom days are better than others, but it will be at least six morw weeks until i can claim to be as I was. But I'll get there.