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View Full Version : Will Boris treat the NHS and Staff differently in future?


Denver
12-04-2020, 05:42 PM
Do you reckon this pandemic and his personal battle with it will make him realise how vital the NHS is to our country or will he forget about them?

Kate!
12-04-2020, 05:45 PM
Poll??

I hope he does realise this. I think 75% chance he will. They did save his life.

Liam-
12-04-2020, 05:45 PM
He’ll pretend to, but he’ll allow his cabinet to vote against him so he keeps the NHS down but doesn’t get the blame

Mokka
12-04-2020, 05:47 PM
Nope

Beso
12-04-2020, 05:50 PM
Things are changing, things wI'll be different. .if we are lucky it may be there in five years to worry about.

Mitchell
12-04-2020, 05:51 PM
He’ll pretend to, but he’ll allow his cabinet to vote against him so he keeps the NHS down but doesn’t get the blame

This

Kazanne
12-04-2020, 05:57 PM
I'm sure he already knew how important they are .

caprimint
12-04-2020, 06:01 PM
I'm sure he already knew how important they are .
... this

Zizu
12-04-2020, 06:17 PM
I think Boris has done a splendid job since getting the main job .... so I don’t know why everyone is doubting that he’ll do his very best for the NHS ... he was making positive changes BEFORE this cursed virus surfaced .
It’s also ridiculous for so many to lay the blame of the NHS underfunding at Boris’s feet .

The only thing that may hamper the NHS from getting a decent increase is that we are gonna be nearly bankrupt for the next few generations ... I’ve even heard a rumour that our bladdy pensions ( now and in the future ) maybe effected :(

I just saw the Kier Starmer saying that I’d Labour get in next time they will won’t hesitate to spend as we can’t have another decade of austerity !!

I had such high hopes for this guy before he got the leadership but now he’s just a typical bull sitting politician


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Kazanne
12-04-2020, 07:13 PM
Let's hope the fat cats at the top of the NHS also use the funds they are given wisely instead of squandering it as in the past, hope they look after their staff and not everything is about money,It needs to be managed properly and money going to where its needed,not to make those at the top richer, not everything can be blamed on the PM?

Jake.
12-04-2020, 07:14 PM
You’d hope, but we’ll see.

Smithy
12-04-2020, 07:32 PM
They saved my life, they’re doing fine, they don’t need more money will be his attitude

GiRTh
12-04-2020, 07:49 PM
No chance. I bet he doesnt even remember the names of his nurses.

user104658
12-04-2020, 07:49 PM
No. They'll use the upcoming crash to justify harder austerity than we've ever seen before, the NHS will be dismantled ("Sorry, no choice, it wasn't us it was the Covids") and the most vulnerable in society will be left in the dust. They have the perfect scapegoat now, and they will use it.

Beso
12-04-2020, 07:54 PM
No. They'll use the upcoming crash to justify harder austerity than we've ever seen before, the NHS will be dismantled ("Sorry, no choice, it wasn't us it was the Covids") and the most vulnerable in society will be left in the dust. They have the perfect scapegoat now, and they will use it.

If you are correct I will hang my head I shame.

Brother Leon
12-04-2020, 09:08 PM
No chance. It will be same old after all this clears. If anything there will be even more cuts due to the debt and they will once again try find a way to make villains out of those pesky immigrants who are dying for us right now.

GoldHeart
13-04-2020, 12:05 AM
No chance. It will be same old after all this clears. If anything there will be even more cuts due to the debt and they will once again try find a way to make villains out of those pesky immigrants who are dying for us right now.

Sadly this.

I'd like to think things will change but I doubt it :bored:

Kizzy
13-04-2020, 05:26 AM
God knows... I was disappointed that he seemed to be making some kind of statement about the care he recieved from nurses from outside the EU, why did where they came from matter how was that a factor in the quality of care he recieved. It only went to show we are not producing enough qualified nurses tbh.

bots
13-04-2020, 06:09 AM
God knows... I was disappointed that he seemed to be making some kind of statement about the care he recieved from nurses from outside the EU, why did where they came from matter how was that a factor in the quality of care he recieved. It only went to show we are not producing enough qualified nurses tbh.

one he said was from portugal, in the EU

Cherie
13-04-2020, 08:28 AM
one he said was from portugal, in the EU

Yes Jenny from NZ and Luis from Portugal,i thought he was making the point about migrants making a positive contribution which is why he mentioned where they were from, he also reeled off some very English sounding names

user104658
13-04-2020, 09:41 AM
God knows... I was disappointed that he seemed to be making some kind of statement about the care he recieved from nurses from outside the EU, why did where they came from matter how was that a factor in the quality of care he recieved. It only went to show we are not producing enough qualified nurses tbh.They cut the nursing bursary and replaced it with a loan... Who is going to go £30k into debt for a £13 an hour starting salary? And even fewer now that we know how nurses will be treated in a crisis - like soldiers/cannon fodder whilst justifying it by calling them heroes and clapping. Meh.

arista
13-04-2020, 09:58 AM
They cut the nursing bursary and replaced it with a loan... Who is going to go £30k into debt for a £13 an hour starting salary? And even fewer now that we know how nurses will be treated in a crisis - like soldiers/cannon fodder whilst justifying it by calling them heroes and clapping. Meh.


Nasty Johnson PM

MTVN
13-04-2020, 10:09 AM
Nasty Johnson PM

Its Boris who has just restored the bursary after it was removed by Osborne

Cherie
13-04-2020, 10:16 AM
The bursary is back for NHS England anyway

user104658
13-04-2020, 10:22 AM
Nasty Johnson PMIt was actually scrapped under Cameron (and the real force behind it was Osborne). Seems like a lifetime ago.

It was partly restored but at a lesser level.

user104658
13-04-2020, 10:23 AM
Its Boris who has just restored the bursary after it was removed by OsborneThe bursary is back for NHS England anywayPartially, it's less than it was before.

Its also HALF of the Scottish bursary.

It would barely cover student accommodation and because of placements, it's very hard for student nurses to have a part time job... For people who aren't being supported by a partner or parents it's basically impossible. It's a joke.

Cherie
13-04-2020, 10:25 AM
It was actually scrapped under Cameron (and the real force behind it was Osborne). Seems like a lifetime ago.

It was partly restored but at a lesser level.

They have advertised a 5,000 bursary stating in Sept for a range of posts for a few months, Radiographers, OTs, Physios, nurses

Nursing should never have become a degree based profession, thats where the issues started

user104658
13-04-2020, 10:29 AM
They have advertised a 5,000 bursary stating in Sept for a range of posts for a few months, Radiographers, OTs, Physios, nursesLike I said, less than it was before it was scrapped, and the nursing bursary in Scotland is £10k.

Nursing students can't live on £5000 without additional support from a spouse or family. It's that simple. They'll never recruit enough new nurses unless they make it viable.

Cherie
13-04-2020, 10:32 AM
Like I said, less than it was before it was scrapped, and the nursing bursary in Scotland is £10k.

Nursing students can't live on £5000 without additional support from a spouse or family. It's that simple. They'll never recruit enough new nurses unless they make it viable.

And neither can most university students :shrug:

Nursing should never have become a degree based profession, thats where the issues started

Scottish nursing vacancies have risen by nearly a third in three months, prompting the Royal College of Nursing (RCN) to issue fresh calls for action in order to tackle the shortage. ... In the community, there was a 21% rise in nursing vacancies from 783 in March to 893 in June.6 Sep 2019

so the bursary and free tuition isn’t attractive it seems

Tom4784
13-04-2020, 11:35 AM
**** no, He'll ride the wave of gammon appreciation and he and the rest of the Tories will swiftly forget about the NHS as soon as this is over. The Tories do not care about the NHS, they want the pharmaceutical money that pollutes US politics.

Remember that Boris was happy to sacrifice people in the hopes that the survivors would develop herd immunity, the man's callous as ****.

arista
13-04-2020, 11:38 AM
**** no, He'll ride the wave of gammon appreciation and he and the rest of the Tories will swiftly forget about the NHS as soon as this is over. The Tories do not care about the NHS, they want the pharmaceutical money that pollutes US politics.

Remember that Boris was happy to sacrifice people in the hopes that the survivors would develop herd immunity, the man's callous as ****.

No that was his Scientific adviser

user104658
13-04-2020, 11:52 AM
And neither can most university students :shrug:

Nursing should never have become a degree based profession, thats where the issues started

Scottish nursing vacancies have risen by nearly a third in three months, prompting the Royal College of Nursing (RCN) to issue fresh calls for action in order to tackle the shortage. ... In the community, there was a 21% rise in nursing vacancies from 783 in March to 893 in June.6 Sep 2019

so the bursary and free tuition isn’t attractive it seems

Most university students don't have to go on 40hr/week unpaid placement and can have a part-time job.

I disagree fundamentally about it "not being a degree based profession" - there is ample evidence that well educated nurses = less mortality across the board. Nurses are and should remain trained medical professionals, they're not levelled-up healthcare assistants.

Also the reason for rising vacancies is poor pay and poor working conditions meaning that new people aren't attracted to the profession, as well as a significant number of experienced nurses from the EU leaving the country thanks to good old Brexit.

Tom4784
13-04-2020, 11:55 AM
No that was his Scientific adviser

And he decided to follow that advice until he relented from backlash because the rest of the world's experts were saying something different.

He followed that advice because it suited his needs. He chose to implement it before he took it back. He gladly made a decision that would have cost us thousands of more lives and he was glad to do it.

Never forget that, never try to twist that unto something else because it is what it is. He let his true face show at that point.

Cherie
13-04-2020, 12:12 PM
Most university students don't have to go on 40hr/week unpaid placement and can have a part-time job.

I disagree fundamentally about it "not being a degree based profession" - there is ample evidence that well educated nurses = less mortality across the board. Nurses are and should remain trained medical professionals, they're not levelled-up healthcare assistants.

Also the reason for rising vacancies is poor pay and poor working conditions meaning that new people aren't attracted to the profession, as well as a significant number of experienced nurses from the EU leaving the country thanks to good old Brexit.

NHS Digital report has revealed a number of interesting fact about the NHS workforce. Below is the breakdown of NHS Nurses Nationalities.

84% of nurses & health visitors in hospital and community health services (HCHS) are British.

7% (22,081) of nurses report an EU nationality other than British. Of these, 58% are either Irish, Spanish or Portuguese.

6% (16,727) of nurses report an Asian nationality. Of these, 90% are either Philippine or Indian.

There are 7,004 nurses with an African nationality.

The highest ‘Other’ nationality is Jamaican, with 469.

I think 3 years at university is off putting for many wanting to get into nursing, it’s a job that requires common sense and empathy plus a flair an desire to look after people which no amount of lectures can teach, my sister was a Theatre nurse, she qualified before the current need for a degree of course she still had to study, and she also studied throughout her career, so not going to uni doesn’t mean they wouldn’t be well educated. Pay does need to be addressed, I think NHS conditions are pretty good ie. holidays, pension, sick pay, support

Withano
13-04-2020, 12:23 PM
No lol

Babayaro.
13-04-2020, 12:24 PM
He’ll pretend to, but he’ll allow his cabinet to vote against him so he keeps the NHS down but doesn’t get the blame

.

user104658
13-04-2020, 12:38 PM
I think 3 years at university is off putting for many wanting to get into nursing, it’s a job that requires common sense and empathy plus a flair an desire to look after people which no amount of lectures can teach, my sister was a Theatre nurse, she qualified before the current need for a degree of course she still has to study, and she also studied throughout her career, so not going to uni doesn’t mean they wouldn’t be well educated. Pay does need to be addressed, I think NHS conditions are pretty good ie. holidays, pension, sick pay, support

There is plentiful, significant, peer reviewed academic evidence that proves that a higher number of degree-educated nurses results in better health outcomes, including reduced mortality rates, across all areas of medicine. The research has been done, the numbers have been crunched... You not thinking its necessary really means absolutely nothing Cherie :umm2:.

And when I talk about conditions I'm not talking about sick pay and holiday allowance - those are always decent in public sector employment.

I'm talking about how front line staff are viewed by management (and politicians), the toxic culture of professional bullying and mistreatment, the threats made against potential whistleblowers, the general disregard for the professional qualifications of the workforce...

But it seems like we can't even make it through one TiBB thread DURING the pandemic without flat denials that there's mistreatment of the workforce, so to answer the question of, "do we expect that things will be better post-Covid?"....... Lol, no. Everyone will go right back to ignoring the elephant.

Cherie
13-04-2020, 12:47 PM
There is plentiful, significant, peer reviewed academic evidence that proves that a higher number of degree-educated nurses results in better health outcomes, including reduced mortality rates, across all areas of medicine. The research has been done, the numbers have been crunched... You not thinking its necessary really means absolutely nothing Cherie :umm2:.

And when I talk about conditions I'm not talking about sick pay and holiday allowance - those are always decent in public sector employment.

I'm talking about how front line staff are viewed by management (and politicians), the toxic culture of professional bullying and mistreatment, the threats made against potential whistleblowers, the general disregard for the professional qualifications of the workforce...

But it seems like we can't even make it through one TiBB thread DURING the pandemic without flat denials that there's mistreatment of the workforce, so to answer the question of, "do we expect that things will be better post-Covid?"....... Lol, no. Everyone will go right back to ignoring the elephant.


I don’t have first hand experience of this as I don’t work in the NHS, all those things happen in many big organisations including Westminster as far as we hear, not sure why your wife went into nursing so recently, its a mystery given all your comments above :shrug:

Kizzy
13-04-2020, 12:59 PM
one he said was from portugal, in the EU

Can you comment on the point then? Why does where they come from matter?
I don't understand the significance, is he attempting to say those nurses were somehow more diligent because they were from outside the UK?

We don't need convincing that all nurses are doing a fantastic job no matter the country of origin, that said as highlighted by TS the removal of the bursary showed that policy was recruitment from overseas, therefore it shouldn't have been a surprise that some of his carers were non UK residents.

What is changing is status, as low income workers post brexit becoming a permanent resident will be very hard, so a thankyou for working for the NHS will be a plane ticket home before you retire.

user104658
13-04-2020, 01:03 PM
I don’t have first hand experience of this as I don’t work in the NHS, all those things happen in many big organisations including Westminster as far as we hear, not sure why your wife went into nursing so recently, its a mystery given all your comments above :shrug:

Frankly I don't think she would go down the same route if she'd been aware of what it's like for nurses (and ESPECIALLY students, who are treated like dirt) beforehand.

Crimson Dynamo
13-04-2020, 01:08 PM
Yes I am sure the leader of a main political party has no idea how valuable the NHS is

Just like when Blair/Brown and labour were astonished by how much the economy mattered when the financial crash happened. It had never occurred to them prior to this...

Looks like the sale to the USA big pharma is off

user104658
13-04-2020, 01:10 PM
What is changing is status, as low income workers post brexit becoming a permanent resident will be very hard, so a thankyou for working for the NHS will be a plane ticket home before you retire.

The really "strange" (suspicious) things is that the cut-off salary for what's considered "skilled" is right at the bottom of band 5... As soon as nurses are moving up the band, they suddenly pass the salary threshold into being accepted. It's so close to the exact figure that I honestly suspect its deliberate. Higher grade nurses are OK to stay, lower grades will be packed off home.

Kizzy
13-04-2020, 01:11 PM
NHS Digital report has revealed a number of interesting fact about the NHS workforce. Below is the breakdown of NHS Nurses Nationalities.

84% of nurses & health visitors in hospital and community health services (HCHS) are British.

7% (22,081) of nurses report an EU nationality other than British. Of these, 58% are either Irish, Spanish or Portuguese.

6% (16,727) of nurses report an Asian nationality. Of these, 90% are either Philippine or Indian.

There are 7,004 nurses with an African nationality.

The highest ‘Other’ nationality is Jamaican, with 469.

I think 3 years at university is off putting for many wanting to get into nursing, it’s a job that requires common sense and empathy plus a flair an desire to look after people which no amount of lectures can teach, my sister was a Theatre nurse, she qualified before the current need for a degree of course she still had to study, and she also studied throughout her career, so not going to uni doesn’t mean they wouldn’t be well educated. Pay does need to be addressed, I think NHS conditions are pretty good ie. holidays, pension, sick pay, support

Is there a source for this info? Policing too is degree based doing the degree while training would be better but prior is silly imo, my sister was the same only entered with an O level in art, she gained a masters and became a specialist nurse practitioner during her career.

user104658
13-04-2020, 01:14 PM
Looks like the sale to the USA big pharma is off

I agree but mainly because I think it's going to take the US healthcare system years to recover itself after this, so the international pharma colonisation attempts will be on hold.

Crimson Dynamo
13-04-2020, 01:16 PM
I agree but mainly because I think it's going to take the US healthcare system years to recover itself after this, so the international pharma colonisation attempts will be on hold.

I am still going to clap Pfizer and J and J on Wednesday night tho

user104658
13-04-2020, 01:17 PM
Is there a source for this info? Policing too is degree based doing the degree while training would be better but prior is silly imo, my sister was the same only entered with an O level in art, she gained a masters and became a specialist nurse practitioner during her career.The thing is they do nearly 3000 hours of on the job training during the degree course, too.

Tbh they could solve the entire problem by paying trainee nurses min wage while they're on placement... God even apprenticeship wages would be something... They currently get ZIP and are treated more like free healthcare assistants than trainees sometimes. Total pot luck too, some mentors are amazing and teach their students loads on the job, some can't be arsed and send them off on menial tasks all day.

Kizzy
13-04-2020, 01:18 PM
The really "strange" (suspicious) things is that the cut-off salary for what's considered "skilled" is right at the bottom of band 5... As soon as nurses are moving up the band, they suddenly pass the salary threshold into being accepted. It's so close to the exact figure that I honestly suspect its deliberate. Higher grade nurses are OK to stay, lower grades will be packed off home.

Yep and judging by these comments he's made that is set to continue...what a thankyou for saving lives

I was thinking this would have changed him, maybe I was wrong.

user104658
13-04-2020, 01:21 PM
Yep and judging by these comments he's made that is set to continue...what a thankyou for saving lives



I was thinking this would have changed him, maybe I was wrong.He wouldn't even have to do a full U-turn, he could just say that the restrictions don't apply to people working in the NHS. I can't see it happening though.

arista
13-04-2020, 02:32 PM
And he decided to follow that advice until he relented from backlash because the rest of the world's experts were saying something different.

He followed that advice because it suited his needs. He chose to implement it before he took it back. He gladly made a decision that would have cost us thousands of more lives and he was glad to do it.

Never forget that, never try to twist that unto something else because it is what it is. He let his true face show at that point.


Yes a Political Error.