Hospital beds... who needs 'em?
Hospital beds... who needs 'em?
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Discussion

Kermit power

Original Poster:

29,622 posts

237 months

Friday 30th October 2020
quotequote all
Well, sick people, obviously, but how often?

The UK has 2.54 of them per 1,000 people. Latvia has just under twice as many, Belgium just over. Germany have over 3 times as many, whilst Japan and South Korea at the top of the list have over 5 times as many. Sweden, on the other hand, have even fewer than we do!

What's going on? I know the NHS gets bed shortages, but surely not that many? Have the Germans and Japanese got loads of empty beds? Then I always thought of Sweden as a high tax but high service sort of place...

Are there mitigating factors I don't know about?

Drumroll

4,381 posts

144 months

Friday 30th October 2020
quotequote all
The proplem with just stating the number of beds per head of population only tells us just that. It doesn't tell us anything about the actual care they get or the ratio of care staff per bed.

Many Soviet bloc countries had massive hospitals, wouldn't say the quality of care was very good.

P-Jay

11,285 posts

215 months

Friday 30th October 2020
quotequote all
I don't know for certain, but it's possible because of the level of home nursing and care home nursing we have in the UK.

A decent amount of people are nursed and indeed die at home now, and it's not like they're in their normal bed with only a mercury thermometer and a pack of paracetamol for company either. Hospital style beds, special wound preventing mattresses that costs thousands and lots of bleeping equipment.

My Wife's old District Nursing Team is 10 strong (well, when 8 of them aren't either in hospital or isolating with Covid), they're one of 5-6 teams who cover our small city (pop around 300k) they will typically have 10 home visits a day each, some of those will be the same patient twice, or sometimes they go in pairs for different and often shady reasons. Most patients will only see them once a week, but others are multiple times a day so I wouldn't like to guess how many patients they have.

There are also 3-4 specialist teams so see people for things like Wounds, Incontinence etc, plus 3rd industry / charity providers who help with palliative care for people with Cancer etc.

That's just Registered Nurses, that doesn't include Health Care Assistants (aka non Registered Nurses) nor Team Leaders and Management etc.

A side note, there are LOTS and LOTS of hospital beds (not the actual beds, of which there are lots of spares in storage) but the wards/building they go in being built at the moment, for obviously reasons, I'm sure it's very reassuring for the public to know how quickly we've increased capacity. Sadly, it takes 7 years to train a Doctor, 3 years to train a Nurse and 1 year to Train a Health Care Assistant. Thanks to the combined efforts of austerity, Brexit and specifically the removal of Nursing Bursaries, it's proving very, very difficult to staff them. In fact the only way to staff them is to move staff from other wards, which means a lot of cancelled operations and clinics, which makes you wonder if we really needs those beds at all.

crankedup

25,764 posts

267 months

Friday 30th October 2020
quotequote all
Boris is going to build 40 new hospitals.

BlackLabel

13,251 posts

147 months

Friday 30th October 2020
quotequote all
You get what you pay for. Unless you are the USA in which case they pay a lot for the nationalised side of their healthcare and it provides a third rate service.




https://www.ons.gov.uk/peoplepopulationandcommunit...

JagLover

46,201 posts

259 months

Friday 30th October 2020
quotequote all
BlackLabel said:
You get what you pay for. Unless you are the USA in which case they pay a lot for the nationalised side of their healthcare and it provides a third rate service.




https://www.ons.gov.uk/peoplepopulationandcommunit...
You might get what you pay for but I imagine we have fewer beds per head of population than many of those who spend less.

As a metric on its own though it is fairly meaningless. We have a large hospice sector in this country for example. I imagine they don't appear as hospital beds but the effect is the same.

Keyhole surgery, and other such advances, have also reduced the time needed to be in hospital.

Edited by JagLover on Friday 30th October 11:10

irc

9,410 posts

160 months

Saturday 31st October 2020
quotequote all
"The OECD said the overall reduction in hospital beds per capita "has been driven partly by progress in medical technology which has enabled a move to day surgery and a reduced need for hospitalisation"."

"An article in the British Medical Journal argued that mental health, learning disability and geriatric services had seen a more marked reduction in hospital beds because of the shift to community services."

https://fullfact.org/health/do-we-have-fewer-hospi...

When we are in the same ballpark as Sweden and Norway who are held up in some quarters models of good government and prosperous equal societies there probably isn't a huge problem.


Sheepshanks

39,415 posts

143 months

Saturday 31st October 2020
quotequote all
Probabaly all a bit screwed up at the moment but in the past have discussed with colleagues in France and Germany and they were baffled at the notion of waiting for hospital treatment.

hidetheelephants

34,131 posts

217 months

Monday 2nd November 2020
quotequote all
BlackLabel said:
You get what you pay for. Unless you are the USA in which case they pay a lot for the nationalised side of their healthcare and it provides a third rate service.




https://www.ons.gov.uk/peoplepopulationandcommunit...
The medicare/medicaid bit is the relatively efficient bit; it's the private bit that inflates the numbers because of bills padded with unnecessary tests, price gouging, then there's overpriced drugs due to cartels and the the often stty behaviour of the HMOs.

GroundEffect

13,864 posts

180 months

Monday 2nd November 2020
quotequote all
JagLover said:
BlackLabel said:
You get what you pay for. Unless you are the USA in which case they pay a lot for the nationalised side of their healthcare and it provides a third rate service.




https://www.ons.gov.uk/peoplepopulationandcommunit...
You might get what you pay for but I imagine we have fewer beds per head of population than many of those who spend less.

As a metric on its own though it is fairly meaningless. We have a large hospice sector in this country for example. I imagine they don't appear as hospital beds but the effect is the same.

Keyhole surgery, and other such advances, have also reduced the time needed to be in hospital.

Edited by JagLover on Friday 30th October 11:10
Why would Belgium, Japan, South Korea and Germany be any different in the advanced nature of their care? They're hardly countries considered backwards....