Friday, November 04, 2011

Another health Care Election Promise...to be broken

Saskatchewan will be going to the voting poles on Monday November 7th 2011, and to no surprise for many, a promise of a new hospital was made by the party seeking re-election. Four years ago the same promise was made, now the Saskatchewan party is saying, "See, we now have a completion date for your new hospital."

Moose Jaw is currently a 100 bed hospital in need of a lot of upgrades. What the Saskatchewan Party has announced is a new "30% smaller" but state of the art hospital of this city of 31,000 +. The new facility will be run as a "lean business", thus, they figure, reducing costs, waiting times for surgery, etc.

As it stands now there are not enough beds in Moose Jaw, not enough nursing homes and not enough doctors. We are going to lose more doctors if this government gets re-elected for they have no idea what health care is really all about, much less what health care consumers really need.

My hope is that the doctors in this area will speak up, and loudly, for they are the only ones to whom governments ever really and truly listen to.

As for you nurses out there, for gods sakes, more importantly for your patient's sakes....say something...and say it loudly!

Sunday, October 16, 2011

Health Care and Political Promises

It is election time in Saskatchewan again and of course health care is being used as a platform. No surprise there. Moose Jaw has waited many years for word on a new hospital to replace the aging one we have now. Just last year (perhaps it was 2 years ago) the ICU unit was revamped. Now, just prior to election time, we are told a new hospital will be built, beginning in 2013 and completed in 2015.

Of course my initial reaction was, "Just how small is the hospital going to be if the politicians feel it can be constructed within a two year time frame?"

It seem sour new hospital will be run under a "lean system" and be 20 beds smaller than it is now. The new facility will be a mere 80 beds (as rumor would have it). Keep in mind please that this is a city of approximately 32,000 people and many smaller facilities in and around the city have been severely downsized.

Here is my second "Letter to the Editor" on the subject

Letter to the Editor
Moose Jaw Times Herald
Not against a “lean system”, just lean thinking

I was dismayed to hear the new hospital Moose Jaw will receive is going to be only 80 beds; that certainly explains its’ ability to be constructed in just 2 years. Adopting a lean system in health care should make a 100 bed hospital function more like a 120 bed hospital. Unfortunately a mere 80 beds will likely leave this city’s residents in much the same boat as they are now, including long wait times for procedures and hallway medical care.
In brief, the lean system used in health care was adopted from the systems used by manufacturing companies to increase production and decrease associated costs. It can have many benefits for governments and health care organizations, including decreasing wastes of time and materials, better patient flow, less stress on health care staff and decreasing incidences of medication and care errors. With the money saved, more dollars could be put towards increasing training seats for doctors and nurses, help with tuition costs, more school health nurses and better access to health care practitioners for all health care consumers. More and better quality care nursing homes could also be witnessed as a result from better run systems.
Unfortunately, lean thinking seems to have seen only the immediate cost savings. The current practices of NHS services in Britain have caused a tremendous decrease in the quality of health care in their system. Is Saskatchewan to follow suit? Will Moose Jaw add this as a claim to fame? I will be most interested to hear what all political parties have to say on this issue as election day fast approaches.

Wendy Getchell
Moose Jaw

Sunday, April 03, 2011

Political Elections and Health Care

Canada is forced to go to the political election polls again, and again the "want to be Prime Minister" and their power hungry parties are using health care to solicit votes. I do hope most Canadians have enough sense by now to realize the promises of money and fixes for health care are basically nothing but lies. Always have been.

The hospital in Moose Jaw Saskatchewan has been promised money for upgrades, perhaps even a new hospital, over several elections. Little has happened because there is always an excuse made once the elected government takes office.

Please tell me people can learn to stop being so damn gullible?

Canada no longer (as far as I am concerned and witness) has a health care system to impress anyone!

Saturday, January 22, 2011

Drug Shortages Affecting Nursing Care

If you work in hospital, or nursing homes, doctors offices, or perhaps even in a pharmacy as a clerk, as I am, you may already be well aware of the growing drug shortages. As far as I am aware at this time it is all across North America.

The FDA keeps a list of current shortages and their apparent reasons; anything from manufacturer no longer makes, increased demand or even problems with raw materials are all cited as reasons. Reasons aside, nurses need to keep abreast of what is happening,and why, because health care consumers may ask, and you need to have some sort of answer.

Nurse Practitioners will definitely need to keep on top of this growing problem as they it certainly may affect what they are able to prescribe. Nurses in hospitals should be kept up to date by management and pharmacy, not just so they can help support answers to questions that patients may have, but because they need to know how to safely, and accurately, administer meds they may not be overly familiar with.

What is so scary about these shortages? In the case of the United States it seems the government has little if any effect, or control,over the situation. These drug shortages will, and do, affect the health of many.

I would like to know what nurses opinions on this subject are and any experiences they think would be important to share. How we care for our patients and assist doctors in care is going to be heavily impacted by these things that are happening today.