Andrew Anglin
Daily Stormer
January 26, 2017
SWEDEN: I present to you the country with the 2nd highest taxes in the world – having a hospital crisis / meltdown. https://t.co/0CUdUd9m97 pic.twitter.com/haNMsrsJin
— PeterSweden (@PeterSweden7) January 25, 2017
This is going to begin happening to the systems all across Europe.
It just isn’t possible for them to sustain this diversity assault.
SVT:
Frida Reuterskiöld, 28, thinks that the situation at the Sahlgrenska hospital emergency department is much worse today than at any time during the six years she worked there.
“It is not exaggerated when people talk about the crisis. We can not guarantee patient safety in all situations,” she says.
“I feel very stressed and inadequate when I notice that I cannot be there for patients when they need me,” says Frida Reuterskiöld, a nurse at Sahlgrenska hospital emergency department.
SVT News West has in recent weeks reported a tight situation in several parts of the region’s hospitals and departments. Many employees have questioned whether patient safety even be guaranteed anymore. Patients describe a chaotic atmosphere and extreme waiting times.
A common denominator for the problems in health care is space. Patients are lying in emergency rooms waiting for the specialist care that often lingers. Last week, we could tell you about a case where the spot shortages may have cost the life of a pregnant woman.
…
She is clear that she can not speak for anyone but herself, but for Frida Reuterskiöld it is a fact that the situation today is the worst she had seen during her time at the hospital.
“The patient pressure is higher or lower, it is always changing. What is the difference now is that we do not have hospital beds for those who need specialized care, so they are often lying in the emergency room.
“We do of course all we can for them, but we have neither the time nor the right skills to give them the care they need,” continues Frida Reuterskiöld previously spoken about her work with the GT.
…
She tells of another memory from the day that has been difficult for her to digest.
“In one room there was a patient and great weeping. An old person who could not go to the bathroom by theirself. But just then happened several emergency situations with other patients so I had to leave her there in her own urine.
“It was terrible. It felt so unworthy and horrible. But we have no choice but to prioritize those whose condition is most acute,” Frida Reuters Skiöld.
So housing broke down in Sweden a long time ago, they were forcing people out of their homes to give them to migrants, shoving them on luxury liners, museums, wherever. Now we hear that the healthcare system is breaking down.
Eventually, all of their systems will break down completely.
Sweden is just one step ahead of the rest of Europe.
But it’s a small price to pay to have your culture enriched with vibrant diversity.