UK: NHS Tells People the Hospitals are Full and They Should Go to the Chemists Instead

Sven Longshanks
Daily Stormer
November 15, 2014

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Professor Bruce Keogh who has urged the public to go to pharmacies if they are unwell, rather than the Accident & Emergency department at the hospitals.

Thanks to the Jewish lobby groups who changed the immigration laws in Britain and made it illegal to speak out against the ensuing invasion, the hospitals are now so overfilled with freeloaders that the NHS medical director is telling people not to bother going there if you have an accident or emergency, but to go to the chemists instead.

Every week there are 28,000 more patients than last year demanding to be given free health care as their human right and things will only get worse, when the sodomites from Africa start arriving looking for their free AIDS treatments.

Daily Mail:

Mr Hunt issued a warning that the pressures on A&E were unsustainable.

‘Are things going to go on like this? Are we going to have to keep putting more and more sums into the NHS?’ he said.

‘The answer is it is not sustainable in the long run to say all the extra pressure in the NHS has to be borne by the A&E department.’

The ‘bed occupancy rate’ of hospitals is running at 88 per cent, compared with the 85 per cent considered safe. Some, including Birmingham Children’s Hospitals, are above 95 per cent.

If hospitals are too overcrowded there is a greater risk of infection.

David Flory, chief executive of the NHS Trust Development Authority, which supports hospitals, said many were significantly more crowded than this time last year.

He said higher numbers of older patients were coming into hospital with a range of ‘complicated conditions’ and having to stay longer.

It is estimated the extra funding announced by Mr Hunt can pay for the equivalent of 1,000 extra doctors, 2,000 nurses and 2,500 beds.

Hospitals will also hire agency staff as well as paying overtime to staff. They will also reopen wards and departments which had been closed. But doctors’ leader Mark Porter, of the British Medical Association, said: ‘While extra funding is desperately needed, this announcement is merely a sticking plaster. Many hospitals are already at, and in places over, capacity.’

He warned that the NHS ‘needs a long-term plan rather than a short-term fix’.

If that long term plan is to succeed then it can only be repatriation of all counterfeit Britons, employing more foreign agency staff instead will just add to the problem.

waiting room
The waiting rooms will be looking like this within a decade if something isn’t done to stop it.