Patients have a “discomfort” NHSWhich is “the creation of mechanisms to keep them away”, said, New owners of healthcare,
On April 1, NHS Chief Executive Officer Sir Jim McKay spoke of the scribble of the daily phone at 8 am for GP appointment, as an example of patients seeking help.
“We have made it really difficult, and we are probably all at the end,” he told that Wire,
“You have found a relative in the hospital, so you are ringing a number on a ward that never responds. Ward clerk only works nine to five or they are busy doing other goods; GP practice every morning scrambles.
“It seems that we have created a mechanism to keep the public away because it is an inconvenience,” he said.
And he warned that failing to listen to public frustrations could mean the end of National Health Service.
Failure to maternity services, he said, “were cultural and” Thinking that we know the best when mothers know the best, listen to them and listen to families and create service around them “.
He said: “The big concern is, if we do not catch it, and we do not deal with it at the speed, we will lose the population. If we lose the population, we have lost NHS. For me, it is straightforward. Both things are completely dependent on each other.”
Sir gym, earlier this month Said NHS should “tear” This offers the hospital outpatient appointments, saying that millions of regular follow-up cuts would be a priority, as NHS spent more on hospital outpatient than the entire GP system.
He said, “The outpatients are clearly clear. 130 million outpatients a year, about 85 million either followed,” he told the paper, it was wrong that NHS felt that NHS twisted several resources followed by patients at the cost of patients waiting for diagnosis and treatment.
Take care of hospital Sir Jim said it was important to deal with waste in local neighborhood centers and make it more convenient.
Shifting treatment from hospitals to community will be a major objective of the government’s 10-year health scheme, which is the Health Secretary Wes streeting Ready to unveil the next week.
Mr. Streeting has also promised “Eliminating Postcode Lottery”, which focus more on the communities of the work class.
The test “patient electricity payment” will be installed, under which hospitals receive full payment for treatment, when the patient is satisfied, Wire Report.
Sir Jim, who was the chief executive of the Northumbria Healthcare NHS Foundation Trust from 2003 to 2023 – the most high -grade trust in healthcare, said that in that role he tried to read every email and talked to every family who contacted him.
He did not get the 8AM race for a GP appointment “that heart-link moment, someone has got to sit through the phone, they have not met through the ring forever, and then do all this again tomorrow”.

He said: “It seems that we have created a system to keep the public away because it is an inconvenience.
“We have found somehow to start it again; think how we find people who need us, how we stop thinking ‘This is going to be a pain in the donkey if you change because I am quite busy’ and instead think how we know what you need and solve it.”
But he said that NHS performs best when the money is tight. “There is some tension in it, otherwise we will waste money.
“A strong argument is that we have wasted a lot of money in the last few years, we have not spent it wisely as we could.”
The NHS needed to be “de-layer” as it was expensive and slowed down, he stressed, warned that NHS had many “fossils” ways to work.
And he said: “When we want to die at home, many people are dying in the hospital.”
He explained how the system “fails” his elderly mother, with inconsistent care in seven days, “dissatisfied” between lack of weekend services and services.
He praised the employees involved, but said that “a lot of learning a hell” was needed.
“My father died in a hospital, where the local folklore was terrible about the hospital, but the hospital was deaf for it and did not know what was really being said,” he said.
“I was not long in NHS, it was long ago, and I was really feeling powerless.”