Essential items

I’m sure you are all ecstatic to see the virtual return of everyone’s favourite peeved doctor from their unexpected six week international hiatus (think catastrophic family crisis). 

My return to the NHS has been not without some rose tinted glasses (yes I’m surprised too), not least driven by the incredible strides which are being made in the Covid vaccination programme, and how huge a difference this is starting to make. 

There are some things though, which remain a deep seated source of quiet mirth, and one of these is the introduction of drop off points for relatives to bring essential items and possessions to their poorly family members while visiting remains off limits due to Covid. In and of itself, this is a great idea- it stops a large amount of foot traffic in the hospital, reducing the risk of passing on disease, while making sure that patients still have access to the home comforts that will make their stay a little bit more pleasant. 

Now where the joy arises is that these personal possessions are lovingly hand delivered around the hospital by a team of volunteers using a fleet of repurposed Tesco trolleys. There has been absolutely zero effort made to hide the fact that these trolleys have in fact had a previous full life, and in fact they still bear the proud branding of their former owner. The trolleys also seem to have all miraculously appeared from Tesco- no other British supermarket has been targeted in quite the same fastidious way, giving rise to the all important question of whether Tesco trolleys are in fact just generally superior, or whether the person who supplies the hospital with them lives close to an untapped supply (aka Big Tesco). 

In an additional glorious nod to their former heritage, the trolleys are all officially named Dolly the Trolley. We know this because someone has painstakingly stuck a laminated bit of A4 paper to the front of every single one, declaring its new moniker. 

The other magnificent part of this service is the banned items list. The fact that a banned items list even exists in the first place is in itself joyous, but the absolute icing on the cake is that every now and again a little handwritten addendum gets added to the bottom of the list, one can only assume because someone has made a valiant effort to bring it to their loved one who is languishing in hospital. Personal favourites so far have been nunchucks, illegal drugs and machetes. 

The fact that this needs to be spelt out to members of the general public never fails to brighten my day.

Beating Boris

For those of you who inhabit the normal world (aka are sensible enough to not be doctors), let me explain the significance of the first Wednesday in December. This marks the great migration: the day when doctors all change jobs. It’s not quite as dramatic as the first Wednesday in August (affectionately known as Black Wednesday), but it nevertheless involves a fairly great deal of shifting about and upheaval.

Moving to a new job is pretty much what it says on the tin. New colleagues, new department, sometimes even new hospital. It also inevitably involves a new rota, and getting to grips with the quirks of your new rota coordinator, just when you’d finally come to accept how infuriating your current one is.

And this dear reader, is where we take a slight political detour. I am staunchly against the Conservative party. I have never and will never support them. So it pains me greatly that the incumbent leader of the nation is none other than Boris Johnson, very firmly of the tory party.

BoJo is infamous for his incredible indecision, and constant parliamentary U-turns with all major decisions. This has included, but is not limited to, Brexit, lockdown, and pretty much any kind of social funding. And yet, despite his abysmal record for being able to make literally any kind of weighty decision, he has actually managed to confirm what the national lockdown guidance will be over Christmas, a full month in advance.

So why do I mention this? Well it turns out that I’ve found someone who rivals BoJo’s inability to make concrete plans. And this person is the rota coordinator for my next job. I am as astounded as anyone that we have somehow managed to get national guidelines for Christmas from the master of procrastination himself BEFORE the coordinator has published the December rota.

Since my job starts in 5 days with absolutely no sign yet of the rota arriving anytime soon, I’ve resorted to a semi-apocalyptic mindset, whereby I simply do not make any plans whatsoever from the 2nd December, and just pray I don’t start on nights. Scheduling just sort of… ends.. on the 1st, and after that lies a black hole, which I’m hoping someone might be kind enough to shed some light on. Ideally before the day I start.

Wednesday

Picture the scene: It’s a Wednesday morning. My week thus far can probably best be described as acceptably mediocre. I don’t think I can ever quite be called bright eyed or bushy tailed in the morning, but this morning at least I’ve tried to give myself a mini pep talk to convince myself that today is not just going to be mediocre. No. Today we strive for okay.

Immediately on entering the ward I’m made aware that there are two separate ambulance crews hovering in the corridor, both unable to take their patients home because I have not yet finished the discharge paperwork thanks to being deluged the day before.

Mildly stressed, I assure the nurse that the situation is in hand, and that this won’t take me more than 5 minutes to complete. I realise my mistake very very quickly when it turns out that all of the IT software has taken this precise moment to just.. stop working. And I mean cease working entirely. All of it.

And at this point the fire alarm goes off. This adds a wonderfully appropriate background siren to my rapidly building stress level. It’s apparently not actually for a fire (who am I to know), but for reasons unbeknownst to man the powers that be can’t find anyone who actually knows how to turn it off.

And so begins my day: the better part of the local ambulance service queuing in my ward, with no functioning computers and a fire alarm that no one can switch off.

Oh, and the pods are down.

Pods

For those of you lucky enough not to know what a pod is, allow me to quote wikipedia. “Pneumatic tubes are systems that propel cylindrical containers through networks of tubes by compressed air or by partial vacuum.” See also the above handy stock photo. For the purpose of a hospital you put bloods into a container, enter the destination, place the pod in the sending unit, and away it magically flies, making its swift way to the lab for speedy processing.

If, however, pods are something which you have the misfortune of being acquainted with, then dear reader you will know that their planned useful purpose remains something of a wild fantasy, semi-folklore if you will.

I hate the pod system with every fibre of my being. If any blood samples are taken later than mid-morning, which is approximately what time the porter comes round to pick up the ward samples (stuffing them into a large bin bag like a sort of vampirey Santa), then you have the heart sinking realisation that to stand any chance of getting your sample processed you are at the complete mercy of the pods.

My hospital is rather old, and so intelligent design was really not at the forefront of anyone’s mind during construction. This means that I have two pod sending units near me, and if there is a problem with this then the next closest is on the the other side of the fairly large hospital. On my first day of working at the hospital, one of the other doctors offhandedly remarked that “the pods are down”. Foolishly I assumed that this was some kind of catastrophic once-off. In actuality, this is the default that the system runs at.

The first challenge to sending bloods, is of course finding a pod. This is no mean feat. I have on numerous occasions wondered whether I should be bartering my own organs on the black market to try and secure one, but as this has not yet been formally proposed I simply remain open to the option. It took me 2 months of sleuthing to track down the phone number to request more pods, which is almost invariably answered with “I’ll see what I can do”. (Spoiler alert: usually not much).

There are some days though, when I approach the sending station with bated breath, and see to my utter delight that there is a pod! My heart beat quickens, and I can almost feel the heft of the battered plastic container in my hot little hand. My day is made! I can simply send the bloods and return to my other tasks! What joy is this! What efficiency!

But as I reach out to pick up what is surely gold dust in the hospital world, there is a slowly dawning realisation: that the only reason that this pod is still here is because every other doctor before me has been unable to send it. Yep, you guessed it. The pods are down.

I’ve also had the tremendous fortune of being on the ward which actually contains the sending unit, and from a vantage point just inside the doctors’ office you can see the whole drama unfold for all of your hapless colleagues: the ecstasy and unbridled joy, followed by the swift comprehension and the head bowed in defeat.

On the plus side I know the fastest shortcut to get to the lab. I’ve got a promising career as a porter in another life.

So who am I?

Hello there readers on the inter web. After some gentle prodding to do so, I’ve finally hit the point of insanity which makes you go “oh what the hell I’ll start a blog”. If nothing else, at least it’s something to do while the country goes into meltdown yet again. 

So who am I? I’m an NHS junior doctor (probably the most important qualification I have to write this), but I’ve also long been left bemused by many of the idiosyncrasies which make up day to day life in NHS hospitals. I’ve seen them from afar as a student, and really up close and personal as a fully fledged physician, and they seem to grow more infuriatingly bizarre the closer you get. 

Despite every effort the system makes to thwart reason, I’m also still proud of the care that gets provided day in, day out, to people who need it. 

And of course, all views are my own.