National Health Service.

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jarndice
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National Health Service.

Post by jarndice »

I write this with our American good friends in mind,
On Saturday I collapsed and was blue lighted by skilled highly trained Para-Medics to the local NHS Hospital, Into the Emergency Room, where I was placed in a cubicle and examined by the duty surgeon,
I was sent for a chest X-Ray then a "CT" scan, the diagnosis was an inflamed heart, :thumbdown:
I was taken in my bed to a 6 bed male ward (Modern, bright, and very well equipped) I was hooked up to a monitor and tut tutted by the ward staff better than any mother hen to her chicks, a light snack then given a number of drugs to calm my heart down, then sleep,
The next morning a good breakfast a shower and a natty line in pyjamas (No Not the backless ones) :haha:
The Consultant and his entourage came at 0930 am and chatted with each patient, I was told that after examination of my blood and the X-Ray and "CT" scan, I would be having an operation the next day (Monday) or the following day,
I spent the day drinking fruit juice, and coffee, eating a 3 course meal and chatting with the 5 other men in the ward. every 10 minutes we all had a test of our blood pressure ( this was carried out automatically by the computer in the monitor when in bed and hooked up to it, A major accident nearby meant the Monday appointment was moved to Tuesday, :thumbdown:
I woke to a shower and a light breakfast then still in bed taken by lift (Elevator) to the 2nd floor where the Consultant surgeon told me exactly what would happen and then listed the positives and the negatives of the operation.
I sighed the consent paper, :silent:
And into the Operating theatre I went, I was transferred to the operating table and introduced to the team about to carry out the operation, all young and keen and from every corner of the World, :clap: :clap:
I got a local anaesthetic through a "Cannula" in my arm, I looked at a huge multi-screen television as the surgeon with a boom mike started. Entry was made through my wrist and he talked as the devise progressed along the inside of my arm,( It did not hurt merely a slight discomfort) shorty he called for a "Stent" giving details of the type and size he required, he moved on then,
"OH"
My endangered heart nearly stopped when he said that,
He then said this was an area of the heart that he could not see with scan or X-Ray when examining the pictures prior to the operation. An an area is worn almost paper thin and is almost certainly the basic cause of the failure.,
I was trembling.
He calmly called for another "Stent" of a certain size the call came back "Loaded" and the surgeon guided it into place, He said "Just going to the edge to make sure we have no more damage"
Then I nearly cried when said "Ok boys and girls heading for the exit" Shortly after the cameras pulled back, the protective screen lifted, and the Monitor darkened,
"Well Shaun you can give serious thought to training for next years London Marathon"!!!
Smiles all round then my bed came into the operating theatre and I was lifted onto it and pushed to the recovery room.
I rested under intense observation for an hour and 30 minutes then wheeled into the lift (Elevator) up to the 3rd floor 6 bed all male "CCU" Coronary care unit ,(This room made a Star Wars set look like something out of a black and white Flash Gordon movie.) ! was plugged into a monitor, and later the Surgeon came by to ask how I felt? then a light supper and sleep,
Woke to bright sunshine and after a larger breakfast the team came doing their rounds and I was told I could go home later that morning !! :thumbup:
Here I am alive and with a future thanks to a dedicated team within the much derided especially by many Americans, British National Health Service.
Cost of the operation to me at the time, NOTHING!! :haha:
I and every other taxpayer in the UK pays for it through their wages each month.
And I must emphasize this was a local general hospital in semi-Rural England, not a specialist cardiac unit in a major city teaching hospital.
Shaun.
Last edited by jarndice on Wed Oct 05, 2016 4:06 pm, edited 1 time in total.
I think I am about to upset someone :haha:
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PainlessWolf
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Re: National Health Service.

Post by PainlessWolf »

Shaun,
Personally, I am just glad that you have returned safe and sound. There has been enough stress associated with the Forum for me already. Time for some good news such as this. ;o)
regards,
Painless
...Here for the Dawn...
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jackalope
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Re: National Health Service.

Post by jackalope »

Shaun, oh my God I'm glad you're ok!

I'm NOT a fan of taxes at all, however that said if you do not pay for health insurance then it's basically the same thing.

I pay for health insurance, a nice chunk of my check and my wife's goes to pay for our health care. If they did away with charging me almost $500 every month and my wife almost $400 every month I wouldn't mind the money going to taxes instead. My STRONG objection is to paying for health insurance and then paying high taxes as well. 1 or the other thanks much.

I make just under $3000 every 2 weeks before taxes and health care, afterwards I'm lucky if I bring home half of it! That is just WRONG!
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Jake79
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Re: National Health Service.

Post by Jake79 »

Glad to hear your ok Shaun and back home.. :thumbup:
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dgsselkirk
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Re: National Health Service.

Post by dgsselkirk »

Glad to hear it all went well Shaun. Start training... :D
"There are things in Russia which are not as they seem..."
Georgy Konstantinovich Zhukov
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jackalope
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Re: National Health Service.

Post by jackalope »

Shaun, do you do any exercises? Any physical activity during your daily life? Certainly not trying to be rude I just don't want to hear you have a heart attack.

Walking and bicycle riding are great and low impact and you can start as slowly as you like.
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jarndice
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Re: National Health Service.

Post by jarndice »

Jack I walk the forest most days and when I have a bit of time we have a great big old Hunter who costs me a fortune in Vet fees and feed who enjoys a workout across the Downs,
I swim twice a week And we go Scuba diving somewhere in the Indian Ocean for Three or more weeks a year .And I run (reluctantly) with the Grandkids
The Doctor is blaming the event on stress and a lack of sleep over many years.,
(So little time and so much to do)
And at Ft 5,7in and 10 stone 4 pounds I am not overweight,
But My Father was only 50 when he died (Heart) and my Mum was in her late 60s (Stroke) so I blame a second rate set of genes. But thanks for your concern.
I now have sufficient drugs to open a pharmacy,
And as a Pensioner They are free from the "National Health Service" :haha: :haha:
Shaun.
I think I am about to upset someone :haha:
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jackalope
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Re: National Health Service.

Post by jackalope »

Wow Shaun sounds like you're active enough! Stress and lack of sleep? Damn! Have a glass of wine, and take a nap! I'd advise sex too but I'm not going to go there. 8O. Oh damn.... I went there! :haha:
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43rdRecceReg
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Re: National Health Service.

Post by 43rdRecceReg »

Relieved to learn that you're still in land of the very-much-alive, Shaun, and that the blue light experience wasn't an 'out-of the-body' type!. Glad too, that in the midst of a potentially pant-filling event, you retained
that trademark satirical viewpoint on life's rich pageant. No matter how fit you keep yourself, there's always that unknown genetic legacy to cope with. I had my first (and hopefully last) blue light experience ;last year when- after a nanosecond slip- I found myself on my back with my right leg bent so far back, it would make a yogi green with envy ..or :sick: at the sight of my foot fixed improbably in a 4 o'clock position. Bizarrely, I remember savouring the laughing gas in the ambulance with a quite peculiar detachment (reminiscent of your whole encounter with medical professionals!). After a massive whiff, when I though i might lift off like a balloon,
I recall the nurse in the ambulance, huffing and puffing whilst trying to put my dislocated ankle (with spectacular double break, no less :O ) back in a 12 o'clock position! I did actually begin to laugh when she had to put her own leg up on the gurney to get extra leverage on the wayward pedal extremity...
Anyway, it was bad enough losing Alpha...so make sure you don't overwork those stents with an excess of the 'action man' stuff. :lolno: :lolno:
Like you, I'm thoroughly grateful for the NHS, even though it's a different organisation in Scotland....(and they did allow phones and whiskey on my emergency ward..!).
Take good care of yourself, old chap...
Roy.
"Get your facts first, and then you can distort them as much as you please"- Mark Twain.
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jarndice
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Re: National Health Service.

Post by jarndice »

Thank you Roy,
You are very kind as everyone else has been, :thumbup: :clap:
I would have paid good money to view the efforts of your Para-medic trying to get you ambulatory, :lolno:
By the By everyone in all three wards that I was a brief resident in were freely using their Mobiles, although the place was as dry as a Witches wassak, :crazy:
You be careful with your pedal extremities,
They can transplant hearts but they have had no success with legs yet. :thumbdown:
Shaun.
I think I am about to upset someone :haha:
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