How can Wes Streeting make NHS ‘fit for future’ when Labour isn’t fit for purpose? | Politics | News

How quickly can I see in A & E if I hit my head on the wall? And would I see it faster if I explain that this is due to the Labor’s health plan that they pushed today? I would give you a chance, but I’m scared, and I was full of NHS staff who reacted to Wes Streeting’s great plan of waiting rooms of hospitals around the country.
Considering my latest experience with A & E, I can say it will take 40 minutes. I have blood tests every two weeks, a nurse visits me every Friday and when I go to see my GP, my appointments usually take at least 20 minutes. All my recipes are free and as a special treatment, I dripped chemotherapy and immunotherapy in my veins while sitting and eating mini cheddar.
One survivor has become my second job. And I know I’m one of the lucky ones because the health services I get is much better than most.
However, since I spend a long time in hospitals, I know that I am one of the exceptions of the rule.
Most people can be stuck on waiting lists for years, struggle for 08:00 for appointments and have to drive miles to see their experts.
Therefore, in theory, I should welcome Labour’s 10 -year health plan. However, it is difficult to be excited for something that is launched as “appropriate for the future” when put forward by a government that is not suitable for the purpose.
Like a child who showed his new toys to his friends after Christmas, the idea that Wes Streeting is most proud of the strategy is the idea of shifting from hospitals to community health centers.
Apparently this is a “radical” plan. It is so radical that it happens.
When I diagnosed cancer in the summer of 2023, this community was in one of the health centers. I made an appointment with a clinical nurse specialist and met the surgeon to operate on me. Then I went to the pharmacy.
The Community Health Center I went to was a small hospital without a bed and this will be all health centers.
Health centers and medical centers are already up and down in the country, even though I say.
Wes Streeting says NHS needs to change in a “dramatic way”, but it’s hard to do if he doesn’t already know what’s existing.
Keir and Cronies have been obsessed with the idea of technological developments, as it has been since it has come to power, but it does not realize what it is from where NHS should be.
It seems to want AI to be included in all areas of health services, but nurses who look at me just want printers that don’t get stuck.
He wants medical teams and patients to communicate through an NHS application. Doctors who care about me just want computers that don’t collapse.
In addition, large machines, such as those used in radiotherapy, want air conditioning that run properly. It does not result when the next heat wave arrives.
The strategy also repeats the idea of the government’s previous emergency and emergency care strategy for the “mental health emergency departments ..
This is instead of making sure that A & E departments are safe places for everyone to treat. And apparently, if someone is in a mental health crisis and tried to kill themselves, forgetting that they have a high chance of needing some treatment for physical injuries.
When my GP appointments usually last for more than 20 minutes, it’s nice to see that the government is taking steps to ensure that other people can take one.
Wes talks about conversation, but he definitely doesn’t go for a walk.
The plan provides much more GP training, but I have been told that many GP trainees from this summer training programs are facing unemployment, because the government will not give NHS funds to establish business.
So, if they will never see patients, what is the meaning of exposing an increase in GP trainees?
A man less sick than me claimed that it was a worker government – people voted for change, but they suffered inadequacy.



