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For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.If this article is totally accurate, shame on the organisers. Gather 100 people into a room, demonstrate how to give the vaccination, collect your doze go home and administer it. Diabetics give their own injections, some give themselves hormones, anticoagulants, surely some of us could administer our own . ?
Many of the Covid vaccine sites have been chosen because of their capacity to accommodate lots of patients, not for their easy access. The NHS cannot be held responsible for the weather, the IT problems nor the non-attendance of some booked in for their jabs. And i would assume that the vaccines, once opened, would have to be used within a certain time limit or disposed of.
//Shame on you - the 'no shows'.//
//It's not the NHS's fault that people aren't turning up.
I know this may sound incredible, but there is always the possibility that they did not receive their invitation. It's been known to happen. A few months back Mrs NJ got a letter inviting her to a hospital some miles away for an out-patients' appointment. She had nothing wrong with her, had not visited her GP and had not asked for an appointment for anything. Being the good citizen that she is she phoned the hospital to explain the mistake, hoping that the real patient could be contacted in time. An abridged version of what was discussed follows:
"Oh! Can't you make it then?"
"Er...I probably could but it would be a waste of everybody's time as I've nothing wrong with me."
"Oh. So you no longer need the appointment then?"
"I've never needed it. It isn't for me. There's been a mistake. I was telling you so that you might contact whoever it is meant for."
"Hold On. I'll check the system."
[Short pause with keyboard tapping audible]
"It's definitely in your name, Mrs NJ. Are you sure you didn't request an appointment?"
I'll end the tale here as the last time Mrs NJ was asked by a medic if she "was sure" about something was when she'd broken her arm. The quack at the "fracture clinic" was examining an X-Ray of somebody's broken ankle and he asked her if she was sure it wasn't her ankle that was broken. Her response to that (and the question above) is not fit for a family audience.
So mistakes do happen. And apparently the "IT System" which is being used to run this programme is not particularly robust. So I wouldn't be at all surprised if a number of the "no shows" were actually "not inviteds".
//It's not the NHS's fault that people aren't turning up.
I know this may sound incredible, but there is always the possibility that they did not receive their invitation. It's been known to happen. A few months back Mrs NJ got a letter inviting her to a hospital some miles away for an out-patients' appointment. She had nothing wrong with her, had not visited her GP and had not asked for an appointment for anything. Being the good citizen that she is she phoned the hospital to explain the mistake, hoping that the real patient could be contacted in time. An abridged version of what was discussed follows:
"Oh! Can't you make it then?"
"Er...I probably could but it would be a waste of everybody's time as I've nothing wrong with me."
"Oh. So you no longer need the appointment then?"
"I've never needed it. It isn't for me. There's been a mistake. I was telling you so that you might contact whoever it is meant for."
"Hold On. I'll check the system."
[Short pause with keyboard tapping audible]
"It's definitely in your name, Mrs NJ. Are you sure you didn't request an appointment?"
I'll end the tale here as the last time Mrs NJ was asked by a medic if she "was sure" about something was when she'd broken her arm. The quack at the "fracture clinic" was examining an X-Ray of somebody's broken ankle and he asked her if she was sure it wasn't her ankle that was broken. Her response to that (and the question above) is not fit for a family audience.
So mistakes do happen. And apparently the "IT System" which is being used to run this programme is not particularly robust. So I wouldn't be at all surprised if a number of the "no shows" were actually "not inviteds".
// The quack at the "fracture clinic" was examining an X-Ray of somebody's broken ankle //
when that happened to me, and the operative opined
I dont know what you are talking about
there was a letter to the chief exec telling him exactly WHAT I was talking about
and he agreed that it was a "never event" that um should never have occurred.
(concerned radiotherapy)
when that happened to me, and the operative opined
I dont know what you are talking about
there was a letter to the chief exec telling him exactly WHAT I was talking about
and he agreed that it was a "never event" that um should never have occurred.
(concerned radiotherapy)