sugarless sue
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- Rude people! Not being able to do the things I want to do.
Eliminator said:Hi Folks,
Just a thought I had...
So this is the headline in the news at the moment "GPs control of most of the NHS budget by 2013" and the PTC is to be scrapped.
So is this going to be an opertunity to ask your GP for some more expensive treatments for better control of diabetes, my thinking is that for the first year at least they are going to have to spend massive amounts of cash on treatments to keep whatever budget they have for the following year.
If GP's don't do this in the beginning then the following year then the budget is going to be far less.
So it makes sence for them to offer genuine brand treatments and not the cheaper brands of the same drug.
What I want to know is, would it be worth us asking for say an "OMNIPOD" ?
I know my 15yr old son would have one in a flash, if they were available on the NHS. But we are in Liverpool and the childrens hospital has only one child who has an OMNIPOD, and the only reason they got that is that the diabetes parent group had a fundraiser to get it.
I think it would be reasonable to ask as soon as the changover starts at your GP's surgery.
Please leave your views on this idea, even if it's not popssible for us adults, surely it's worth trying for the children with diabetes ?
Squadron Leader said:I know one Practice in my local Consortium is very anti Type 2's testing BG's (I was a patient there for a time) and this is one thing I will be fighting tooth and nail against. I'll point out to them the cost of admitting people into hospital unnecessarily. (Cost: £500/day according to my GP) And that being "pro-active" (oh, how Dr's love that phrase!) is a much better (i.e. cheaper) option.
Services such as Pain Clinics, Diabetes Care, Hearing Tests, etc. being moved out of the local hospitals remit and into the community. Leaving the more specialist treatment to hospitals.
bowell said:I have a very good GP ,But I would Not trust him with my pain control or the Nurses that are already doing the diabetic revues now both ,Are Not DSNs
Sid Bonkers said:Seem to be a lot of new members posting to this thread today saying that the NHS is going to be privatised and the welfare state is in danger etc etc.
Do I smell a left wing troll epidemic?
:?: :?: :?: :?:
Squadron Leader said:One thing that will be happening (in my area, at least) will be services such as Pain Clinics, Diabetes Care, Hearing Tests, etc. being moved out of the local hospitals remit and into the community. Leaving the more specialist treatment to hospitals. Yes, this is partially to cut costs but also to save time (apparently).
goji said:Personally I don't see moving services into the community as a "good thing". I think it leads to a dumbing down of patient care. I have some complicated endocrine problems and a practice nurse simply doesn't have the knowledge to deal with them.
The GPs also lack specialist training in diabetes/endocrinology and don't want to take responsibility for diabetics as they see it as a boring 'practice nurse' job.
At the end of the day - I think they just want to save money by denying us specialist care.
In Nottinghamshire, GPs have improved care for the 4,000 diabetics in their region. By providing specialist support in local clinics in GP practices, the service avoids diabetics having to be treated in hospital.
The Department of Health has insisted the policy is unchanged, but that 'some amendments' would be made.
A spokesman told the newspaper: 'The principles remain the same, as does the clear direction set out by the reforms."
bowell said:Cameron forced into humiliating climb down over NHS reforms as Lib Dems threaten to rebel
http://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/art...limb-NHS-reforms-Lib-Dems-threaten-rebel.html
I would say Nick Clegg and the Lib Dems are in a state of panic over the local elections in May, this 'love-in' between the two parties was never going to last and the first cracks are now beginning to show.
Nigel
the government has dismissed speculation it is preparing for a fundamental U-turn. And the prime minister and his deputy, Nick Clegg, are set to re-state their commitment to the plans.
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