Sven Longshanks

Daily Stormer

January 7, 2015

Britain’s hospitals are collapsing in chaos under the sheer weight of trying to deal with all the defective inbred parasites that have flooded the country ‘just looking for a better life.’

Five hospitals now have had to declare ‘major incidents’ which are supposed to only happen if there is an air crash or a terror attack, which shows you just how serious the war being waged against us now is.

Yet the government are still refusing to admit what has caused the massive increase in patients requiring care and are instead trying to blame the previous administration, for not forcing doctors to work out of hours.

Daily Mail

At the Gloucestershire Royal, around 30 patients admitted from A&E were over the weekend being housed in a day surgery unit overseen by two nurses as there were no other beds.

One female patient was seen removing a cannula – a tube for medication – from her arm with a napkin and discharging herself on Sunday because she had waited so long for a nurse.

A 35-year-old woman in the same unit said: ‘People were screaming in agony and throwing up … and no one came. They were still doing the morning drugs rounds at 3pm.’

A mother of three with suspected appendicitis who was forced to wait six hours in the same A&E unit yesterday said: ‘There were people standing up. There were not enough chairs.’

Some A&E units are so full that patients are forced to wait outside in ambulances. Harvey Thomas, six, who suffers from autism and cerebral palsy, had a seizure in the early hours of New Year’s Eve, but was left in an ambulance for three hours outside Wrexham Maelor Hospital in North Wales.

At the Royal Blackburn, in Lancashire, there was a queue of 18 ambulances waiting outside A&E on Saturday night unable to drop off patients as the hospital was too busy.

Dr Adrian Boyle, of the College of Emergency Medicine, said: ‘The waiting times are as long as they have been at least since the introduction of the four-hour targets in 2003 … I think we are in for a tough couple of months.’

An email from NHS officials to hospital bosses – leaked to the Mail – yesterday asked them to list the extra help they need to ‘alleviate’ pressure. The Health Secretary is expected to ask council chiefs to free up care home beds.

Andy Burnham, Labour’s health spokesman, claimed Mr Hunt was ‘resorting to panic measures’. But the Health Secretary has blamed increased pressure on A&E services on Labour’s ‘disastrous changes’ to the GP contract in 2004.

A Department of Health spokesman said it had given ‘a record £700million this winter for more doctors, nurses and beds’, adding: ‘The NHS has ensured there are plans in every area to manage the extra demand.’

One former paramedic, who wished to remain anonymous, said the Lancashire hospital did not have enough staff or beds to cope with the number of patients.

It was a similar case at Gloucestershire Royal on Saturday night, where one patient described how just two nurses were left to care for 30 patients – many of whom were screaming in pain and vomiting.

The 35-year-old woman, who was admitted on Saturday with a gynaecological problem, described her experience as ‘terrible’.

She was referred to the A&E department by the out-of-hours service in Cheltenham.

‘I got to Gloucester A&E at 10pm and had to wait for more than three hours,’ she said. ‘There were around 60 people waiting including those who were really old or really unwell.

‘Nurses were seeing patients and then sending them back to the waiting room. When I was finally seen I was given a bed in a day surgery unit that should not have even had patients at that time.

‘There were only two nurses attending more than 30 patients in the unit. People were screaming in agony and throwing up. One man was repeatedly vomiting and no one came.

‘Another lady removed her own cannula as she got so fed up of waiting. She just asked the lady next to her for a napkin and pulled it out. The nurses did not even notice that she had left.’

The woman said staff were visibly stressed and the kitchens were unable to keep track of who needed meals.

‘The nurses did not hide their displeasure,’ she said. ‘The woman in the bed next to me had to ask for pain relief, as she had Crohn’s Disease, and the nurse turned round and snapped “I’m getting it”.

‘The kitchen did not even know people were in there. Our breakfast was really late and they left the lunch tray at the end of my bed so I had to hand out food to other patients at lunchtime.

‘No one was doing observations. They were still doing the morning drugs round at 3pm. It was terrible.

Jennifer Jones, 76, had been treated at Ysbyty Cwm Rhondda Hospital in south Wales for three months, and was due to be discharged to a nursing home on December 23.

But on Christmas Day her condition worsened, and at 11.59pm her son Ceri was told in a phone call to get to the hospital. He flagged down a passing police officer in Treherbert who took him there.

Mr Jones said the scene that greeted him when he arrived at 1.03am on Boxing Day was one of ‘utter panic’ with up to six nurses trying to keep an unconscious Mrs Jones alive.

He was told an ambulance had been called but was yet to arrive. Nurses were ‘constantly’ ringing 999 and an ambulance finally arrived at 3.30am, he said. Mrs Jones was then taken to the Royal Glamorgan Hospital, where she died at 7.20am.

Mr Jones’s brother, Bleddyn, said: ‘The longer it went on, the more the panic became. At one point the nurse told him the call had dropped off the list and she had to re-log it with the operators. It was unbelievable’.

Jason Roome, from the Welsh Ambulance Service, said: ‘We would like to express our sincere condolences to the family of Mrs Jones for their loss.

‘The demand on our ambulance service over the Christmas and new year period has been unprecedented and unfortunately we have been unable to respond to a large number of calls within the eight-minute target.’

‘I had to repeatedly ask for my medication so I could be discharged. My brother had to follow the nurses down the hall to ask several times.

‘I did not feel safe. I probably should have stayed in another night but I felt it was safer to go home and see my GP. I think lives were put at risk. I have never seen anything like it in my life.’