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Two junior doctors left to care for 500 on ERI night shift

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Published Date: 26 April 2008
TWO junior doctors were left to care for up to 500 patients during the night shift at the Edinburgh Royal Infirmary, it was reported today.
The medics, who each had eight months experience, were given responsibility for 18 wards.

A concerned colleague said: "The hospital would have been in deep trouble if two patients had become seriously unwell.

"It was a case of 'there but for t
he grace of God'.

"Mercifully, the night went without major incident but it was a dangerous situation to be in."

Reports said four or five doctors would normally provide overnight cover, but on Wednesday night one doctor did not turn up and another called in sick.

The two doctor's wards included patients with heart, lung and kidney problems.

Concerns have been expressed by Scotland's Patients Association and the British Medical Association, but NHS Lothian denied patient safety had been compromised. Simon Mackenzie, the health board's associate medical director, said staffing levels on Wednesday night had been within safe limits. "There have been no reports of unsafe clinical practice," he added.

"Overnight services at our hospitals are delivered by a multi-skilled Hospital at Night team that consists of senior doctors, highly experienced nurse practitioners, who have a range of additional skills, and some junior doctors.

"A team of staff with many different and complementary skills is in charge of the entire hospital.

"Every speciality also has a consultant doctor on call for support and advice."





The full article contains 253 words and appears in Edinburgh Evening News newspaper.
Page 1 of 1

  • Last Updated: 26 April 2008 11:40 AM
  • Source: Edinburgh Evening News
  • Location: Edinburgh
  • Related Topics: Edinburgh Royal Infirmary
 
1

Voldemort,

Edinburgh 26/04/2008 12:53:42
I know this is the obvious question but where ARE the rest of the Staff??

This gives us the real situation in the NHS - most of the Staff are non essential desk jockeys with made up jobs - very few staff are actually in the front line where they are needed most.

Red tape and a severely misguided approach to care is killing people.

Perhaps this is our political masters way of selling the private sector to us !?
2

Mop,

*********** 26/04/2008 14:37:20
I hope I dont ever need to go into hospital long term.
3

Toast,

26/04/2008 15:15:21
£80 billion extra and not even a third world service,the NHS is a joke,about time managers were prosecuted for endangering patients.
4

Jingsitsme,

EDINBURGH 26/04/2008 18:41:20
What's supposed to happen and what really happens is different!!

Time powers at be realised this and stop living in cloud cuckoo land.

Some of these junior doctors don't have a good command of English and that does not help the patient either.

Country is going to the dogs.
5

THE BPRENTICE,

27/04/2008 02:03:58
Heard an 'expert' talk on the radio about what the govt are doing with the NHS...it sounded bang on, she called it the three D's:

Delay - appointments
Denial - that rationing exists
Dilute - number of staff allocated within areas
6

Fifi la Bonbon,

27/04/2008 02:09:53
"Simon Mackenzie, the health board's associate medical director, said staffing levels on Wednesday night had been within safe limits."

Safe limits? How can he say this? There were two junior doctors with eight months experience. Suppose five people became ill overnight, not just two. Either he is lying or all the papers that have covered this story - I first read about it in the Record - are lying.

The hospital should sue if the press is lying. If Dr or Mr Mackenzie is lying he should be prosecuted for fraud and the Minister should resign for allowing this state of affairs to arise. Thank goodness for a free press not intimidated by these paper tigers, that can report this scandal.

I'm scared in case I become ill and I have to spend any time in Scotland's hospitals.
7

Kitti Kat,

Newtown Square 27/04/2008 21:22:47
If this is how a hospital run by a national health system works, heaven help us here in the US if government gets involved!!I will never understand how or why a country that has a wonderful med school, great doctors and researchers can have such a cold and almost uncareing system as it appears in the UK. There's no way any hospital here would allow 2 residents the responsibility of teneding for so many people. I know this because I worked for surgeons and have several relatives int he medical profession. I was recently taken to the hospital and had immediate care in the ER and great care in the room I was taken to. The nurse assigned to my room (no more than two beds per room and I lucked out and got a small single) and her assistant "appologized" for the lack of "staff" on the floor. Hopefully, things will improve for you.
8

Hashimoto,

edinburgh 28/04/2008 08:50:51
Public services are going to hell in a handbasket. The police are just the same - there used to be 'minimum staffing levels', but these have been replaced with 'aspirational levels'; I'm informed that in effect this has meant that, from time to time, there has only been ONE police officer covering from the West End to Balerno.
Still plenty of bean counters mind - car park at Fettes chock a block on weekdays (quiet after 4.00pm though).

 

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