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Patient Ratings | ||||||||||||
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By: | Anonymous |
| Oct 20 2023 | |||
My 11 month old came to childrens a&e, staff really polite understanding and helped my son doctor we saw was brilliant |
By: | Conbe43 |
| Oct 18 2023 | |||
I visited the A&E Department yesterday with my father in law who was sent there by a doctor at Estuary View. My story is about the A&E Department and how utterly impractical it is now that changes have been made. The waiting room is far too small and everyone is cramped together with seats right next to each other. People standing or sitting on the floor due to lack of room. I am shocked and struggling to understand how the new waiting area is effective when there are just as many patients but less room. There was litter on the floors and packets of biscuits. Blankets laying everywhere and generally it looked and felt awful. There is very limited room for wheelchairs or in fact the chairs that are used by porters and staff to move patients from a to b. One patient had been in the same chair for 24 hours and was given some quite distressing results in front of everyone, not even taken to a side area or a room. That is surely not good practice. We were there for a total of 5 hours, and in that time there were still patients waiting to be seen who had arrived before us. I worry that infections and Covid is encouraged to spread more in that environment. I cannot fault the care that my father in law received it was excellent and he was later discharged after being thoroughly examined and treated accordingly. |
By: | Anonymous |
| Sep 12 2023 | |||
My 84 year old mother was sent in by her GP, with severe leg pain, late at night on 11/9/23. By midday on 12/9/23, over 12 hours after admission, she had only just received her 08.00 antihypertensives, she wasnt sure about her other medication (that must be taken with food), and she had not had a single dose of her 4hrly analgesics since admission. Just as importantly, she had been offered neither food nor any fluids, not even a cup of tea in that 12 hour period. As a former healthcare worker (for 40 years), she knows the part that nutrition and hydration play in maintaining good health but as an elderly lady, she didnt like to ask busy staff but nor should she need to. My mother also has recurrent urinary tract infections and therefore understands how important it is for her to drink plenty throughout the day so, to have been offered nothing at all to drink for over 12 hours is simply appalling and very poor basic patient care. I tried, in vain, to contact A & E to ask them to provide her with a cup of tea and some food. Sadly, after 90 minutes of trying, I had to give up and head off to work. In the course of that 90 minutes, I tried phoning A & E reception, the nurses station and even asked to be put through to the matron/ senior nurse covering A & E but despite numerous attempts nobody answered any of my calls. It made no difference whether I tried using the automated phone system or went through the operator. When I asked about the possibility of speaking to someone else, the operator told me that there wasnt anybody else that they could try. I myself worked as an NHS professional for over 30 years, in nursing and midwifery, and could not believe the lack of basic care or the fact that it was impossible to speak to anyone at all within the department or even the hospital. I understand fully that staff are extremely busy but has it really got to the point where an elderly patient isnt even offered a cup of tea? Where hydration and nutrition are not part of basic nursing care? Or that a concerned relative is unable to speak to a member of staff? This is not the NHS to which my mother dedicated her whole working life. |