Comment on SkyNews | The number of people on NHS waiting lists in England has fallen for the fourth month in a row, new figures show.

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Rogue@feddit.uk ⁨4⁩ ⁨days⁩ ago

I somehow replied to the wrong post. Here’s what I meant to say:


But calling wait lists pointless is also pointless.

This is going to be ultra pedantic but in case I was misunderstood: I’m saying that using wait times as a target is pointless. Obvs we do need wait lists themselves…

What would you propose as a method for measuring NHS effectivness.

First I know I’m not qualified in any way to answer this and there will be people with knowledge who can provide a far better answer. But if you do want my opinion then I’d say a reasonable place to start would be to simply ask the patient. The written answers will be subjective but you can collate all the [yes/no] answers together to see objective patterns of whether patient satisfaction is improving or getting worse.

How long were you waiting? [Number of weeks] (Would be very interesting to compare this subjective answer to the actual recorded data)

Was the wait time acceptable? [Yes/No/I don’t know]

-> Did your condition deteriorate as a result of the delay? [Yes/No/I don’t know]

-> How did you condition deteriorate? [Answer in as many words as you like, or possibly a tree of yes/no questions]

Did you receive treatment? [Yes/No/I don’t know]

-> Did the treatment improve your condition? [Yes/No/I don’t know]

-> Why didn’t the treatment help with your condition? [Answer in as many words as you like, or possibly a tree of yes/no questions]

Were you referred to another service? [Yes/No/I don’t know]

-> Do you agree with the decision to refer you elsewhere? [Yes/No/I don’t know]

-> Why don’t you believe the referral is correct? [Answer in as many words as you like, or possibly a tree of yes/no questions]

Overall how satisfied were you satisfied? [0-10]

-> How could we improve? [Answer in as many words as you like, or possibly a tree of yes/no questions]

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