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[Closed] These here missed hospital appointments in Scotland

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[#5413126]

Why is it completely the patients fault if an appointment is missed?
Turns out for the last year, that Tayside have been sending some of mrs_oab's appointments to our old house in Sheffield (5 years since we left, pre moving here...)...and another half dozen or so were sent out with a day or two notice.
I wonder how many actually look at their own botched appointment record...


 
Posted : 11/08/2013 10:28 pm
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Posting to the wrong place?

[url= http://singletrackworld.com/forum/topic/these-here-missed-hospital-appointments-in-scotland ]Oh teh ironing [/url] 😆


 
Posted : 11/08/2013 10:32 pm
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Aye, well no-one sent me a reminder to the right email like.... 😆


 
Posted : 11/08/2013 10:38 pm
 poly
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It has amused me for a few years that my wife's hairdresser has a more sophisticated approach to appointment management/reminders than her hospital clinic! She gets (automated) text message reminders from the hair dresser and they have an electronic system for 'disseminating' cancellations to people wanting a slot. In contrast her clinic books appointments 12 months in advance and sends no reminders at all; randomly cancels clinics at short notice and has no system to deal with patients who can't attend at the nominated time (come next year!). This is for a fairly serious chronic condition that consumes a major chunk of NHS budget.

We will have been recorded as "DNA" for our daughter because they sent out an appointment with 3 days notice during the summer holidays when half the country was on holiday! Was this for a life saving treatment? Or had a vital complex piece of equipment suddenly become available? Or an urgent referal from a GP that was unexpected? No, it was for a routine pre-school eye check! They've had 5 years to work out when to do it!


 
Posted : 12/08/2013 12:20 am
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Hah - try dealing with the Procurator Fiscal or Scottish Courts Service if you want to see incompetence on a truly epic scale 😉


 
Posted : 12/08/2013 12:25 am
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When i go to my outpatients clinics, they say, come back in 6 months. So I take my card to the desk, they say "No you can't get a time now, we'll post you an appointment". So they send me an appointment for some random time that, sometimes, I can't attend. So, I phone the number, which never answers. So eventually I leave a message saying, how about some other time? To which they do not reply... Until I get a rude letter telling me about how I missed my appointment.

In the last few years I've "missed" appointments that I cancelled, I've "missed" appointments that I never knew I had, and just once I missed an appointment that to this day, I have no idea what it was for. Oh and one time I did accidentally miss an appointment due to screwing up my diary, which I felt really bad about. But I do wonder how many of these are missed by the patient, and how many are missed for them.

OTOH, I did attend a diabetic clinic a while back where every patient turned up, and it was pandemonium- and all day I heard staff grumbling about how everyone had turned up and they didn't have enough staff for that. So I assume there's shrinkage built in.

Hope this doesn't sound like NHS bashing, I love the NHS and I owe them a great deal but I wouldn't run an office like that, and if I did I wouldn't complain when appointments are missed.


 
Posted : 12/08/2013 12:34 am
 br
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It's a bit like Benefit 'fraud':

Fraud costs +£5bn - no, fraud costs £1bn, errors cost £4bn

http://blogs.channel4.com/factcheck/how-much-does-benefit-fraud-cost/

My normal comment (as an Auditor of +20 years) is "I've discovered two cases of fraud in 20 years, but see incompetence every day".


 
Posted : 12/08/2013 8:42 am
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It's useless here in England too. A letter arrived for an appointment for my mother, at the very hospital where she'd died the previous month. 😐

Needless to say, they got short shrift from me on the phone.


 
Posted : 12/08/2013 9:14 am
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I've an appointment tomorrow, as I've been reminded every day for the past week by an automated system that keeps calling me. NOt gonna miss it as i want to get this bloody cast off even for just 5 minutes


 
Posted : 12/08/2013 9:17 am
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Yeah, but just think how much worse the appointments system will be when its all been privatised, eh?


 
Posted : 12/08/2013 9:21 am
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Personally I think the NHS is pretty good. When you get to speak with someone on a face to face basis whether its a doctor or nurse they generally do a good job and treat patient well.

When you have to deal with an office or dept they become a faceless officious nightmare. The appointment "system" is a perfect example of this.


 
Posted : 12/08/2013 9:30 am
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Personally I think the NHS is pretty good. When you get to speak with someone on a face to face basis whether its a doctor or nurse they generally do a good job and treat patient well.

^this, with some proviso's over big organisation / inflexibility / unable to change.
When you have to deal with an office or dept they become a faceless officious nightmare. The appointment "system" is a perfect example of this.

^this.


 
Posted : 12/08/2013 8:18 pm
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Bencooper - Pwah hah hah but I have to 2nd that. Defo the winner and that's from a regular service user!


 
Posted : 12/08/2013 8:47 pm