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jwhop
Knowflake

Posts: 6158
From: Madeira Beach, FL USA
Registered: Apr 2009

posted November 01, 2012 09:50 AM     Click Here to See the Profile for jwhop     Edit/Delete Message   Reply w/Quote
So now we find out the British Socialist Health Care system is paying hospitals bonuses based on how many of their patients they manage to kill. Nice, very nice. In fact, that's one of the names..NICE!

Imagine, hospitals getting paid bonuses for killing their patients!

This is the very same kind of single payer Socialist health care system O'Bomber and his Socialist comrades want for the US but couldn't get initially.

The British are soooo civilized. They complain, they write letters and wring their hands when their husbands and wives, mothers and fathers are deliberately killed by doctors who are supposedly there to help them.

And how those patients of the British Socialist Health Care System are being deliberately killed by their doctors and the language used to describe the process is beyond Orwellian.

It is said these patients are being permitted to die with dignity when...they are being starved and dehydrated to death. Imagine that! These patients are being killed in a manner the US Supreme Court would not permit for the most heinous serial mass murderer.

I wonder if O'Bomber, his Socialist comrades in Congress and members of his Independent Payment Advisory Board..IPAB think Americans are as passive and civilized as the British? I wonder what they think is going to happen when the IPAB denies granny a Pacemaker to regulate her heartbeat and granny goes into cardiac arrest and dies as a result.

There's an old term..."The Bloody British". The British aren't bloody. They're passive and civilized.

I would not want to be a member of Congress who voted for O'BomberCare or a member of the IPAB who denied a life saving device or medical procedure for granny or anyone else.

NHS millions for controversial care pathway
The majority of NHS hospitals in England are being given financial rewards for placing terminally-ill patients on a controversial “pathway” to death, it can be disclosed.
Affairs Editor
31 Oct 2012


Almost two thirds of NHS trusts using the Liverpool Care Pathway have received payouts totalling millions of pounds for hitting targets related to its use, research for The Daily Telegraph shows.

The figures, obtained under the Freedom of Information Act, reveal the full scale of financial inducements for the first time.

They suggest that about 85 per cent of trusts have now adopted the regime, which can involve the removal of hydration and nutrition from dying patients.

More than six out of 10 of those trusts - just over half of the total - have received or are due to receive financial rewards for doing so amounting to at least £12million.

At many hospitals more than 50 per cent of all patients who died had been placed on the pathway and in one case the proportion of forseeable deaths on the pathway was almost nine out of 10.

Last night the Department of Health insisted that the payments could help ensure that people were “treated with dignity in their final days and hours”.

But opponents described it as “absolutely shocking” that hospitals could be paid to employ potentially “lethal” treatments.

The LCP was originally developed at the Royal Liverpool University Hospital and the city’s Marie Curie hospice to ease suffering in dying patients, setting out principles for how they to be treated.

It involves the withdrawal of treatments or tests from patients which doctors believe could cause distress and do more harm than good.

Protocols say that doctors should consult the patient, if possible, and their families.

But the system has been mired in controversy amid claims that it can actively hasten death.

A series of cases have also come to light in which family members said they were not consulted or even informed when food and fluids were withheld from their loved-ones.

In some instances patients placed on the pathway because doctors judged that they were nearing the end of their life went on to recover.

According to responses from a sample of 72 trusts, at least £12.4 million has been paid out in the past two to three years to trusts which hit targets associated with use of the care pathway. But the full figure could be more than £20 million.

Under a system known as “Commissioning for Quality and Innovation” (CQUIN), local NHS commissioners pay trusts for meeting targets to “reward excellence” in care.

These can range from simply recruiting a set number of people to classes to help them stop smoking to providing specialist end-of-life services on wards - such as LCP.

As the goals are set locally, they vary from area to area but in some cases trusts are given specific targets to ensure that a set number of people who die in their hospital are on the LCP.

Elsewhere the targets relate to how the pathway is operated or monitored.

Each Trust was asked how many people had died on the LCP over the past three years and how much money received in that period was attached to goals involving it.

Overall 61 of those which responded said that they used the pathway, translating to 85 per cent of the total.

Of those, 62 per cent disclosed that they had either received, or expect to receive, cash rewards for meeting targets associated with the implementation of the pathway. The remainder said they had adopted the LCP without receiving any payments.

Central Manchester University Hospitals - which received £81,000 in 2010 for meeting targets relating to the LCP - said the proportion of patients whose deaths were expected and had been placed on the pathway more than doubled to 87.7 per cent in the past year.

In Berkshire the Heatherwood and Wexham Park Hospitals Trust received more than £1 million over two years for meeting its LCP goals.

Its targets included carrying out an audit of the number of deaths of patients on the LCP as well as having a “meaningful conversation” with the patient themselves but did not set a specific goal for the number of deaths.

Bradford teaching Hospitals, which qualified for CQUIN payments of more than £490,000 in the last two years, has seen the number of patients dying on the pathway more than double to 51 per cent over the last three years.

In Birmingham the Heart of England NHS Foundation Trust disclosed that 38 per cent of patient deaths occurred on the LCP in 2010 and 27 per cent in 2011. It received a CQUIN payment of £603,886 in the financial year 2010-11 alone.

A handful of trusts openly spoke of either hitting or missing targets connected to the LCP in their responses.

Dr Gillian Craig, a consultant geriatrician who was among the first doctors to raise the concerns over the possible flaws of the LCP, described the use of the incentives as “absolutely shocking”.

“I think there should be questions in Parliament as to who instigated this policy and I think the cash payments should be stopped forthwith,” she said.

“You can’t pay people to use a certain protocol that everybody knows to be lethal.”

Dr Phillip Lee, the Tory MP for Bracknell and a former GP, insisted that the pathway did not amount to “euthanasia by the back door”.

“This is about trying to provide appropriate care to someone who is dying,” he said.

“Palliative care specialists are some of the best doctors that this country has.

“Sometimes there are conflicts between doctors and patients’ families but I just cannot believe that there is anybody in the palliative care arena who is trying to anything other than provide the best care for patients.”

Earlier this week the NHS disclosed that it was beginning a review of the operation of the LCP following concerns highlighted in the media. Dying Matters, a coalition of organisations including hospices, has been asked to speak to relatives about their experiences as part of the inquiry.

The Department of Health has consistently stood by the LCP.

Last night a spokesman said: “The Department of Health does not centrally fund any payments for the use of the Liverpool Care Pathway, but local areas may choose to do so in order to improve the care and support given to people in their last days.

“This means patients can be more comfortable and treated with dignity in their final days and hours.

“The Liverpool Care Pathway is supported by more than 20 leading organisations, including Marie Curie Cancer Care and Age UK, as a way to help meet the care and dignity needs for those who are at the end of their life.

“We are clear the Liverpool Care Pathway can only work if each patient is fully consulted, where this is feasible, and their family involved in all aspects of decision-making. Staff must properly communicate with the patient and their family - any failure to do so is unacceptable.”
http://www.telegraph.co.uk/health/healthnews/9644287/NHS-millions-for-controversial-care-pathway.html

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jwhop
Knowflake

Posts: 6158
From: Madeira Beach, FL USA
Registered: Apr 2009

posted November 01, 2012 09:59 AM     Click Here to See the Profile for jwhop     Edit/Delete Message   Reply w/Quote
Doctors to launch investigation into Liverpool Care Pathway
Doctors are to investigate public concerns over the use of the controversial Liverpool Care Pathway, which has been used without family members’ knowledge.


Hundreds of elderly people are being neglected in NHS hospitals Photo: ALAMYBy Rebecca Smith, Medical Editor
11:27AM BST 24 Oct 2012
42 Comments
The technique is supposed to alleviate suffering in the final hours or days of a person’s life and can involve the removal of tubes artificially providing food and fluid.

Families have come forward saying their loved ones were placed on the pathway without their knowledge and argued they were not dying.
http://www.telegraph.co.uk/health/healthnews/9630194/Doctors-to-launch-investigation-into-Liverpool-Care-Pathway.html


Families left grieving and angry by the Liverpool Care Pathway
Distraught families allege that the NHS protocol designed to allow the terminally ill 'a good death’ is being abused

Left in the dark? Ray Cooper and his daughter, Maxine Richardson, complained that they were not informed when their loved one was put on the LCP

29 Oct 2012

Janet Davies’s eyes well up with tears when she recalls her husband’s death. Colin Davies, an 83-year-old retired prison officer, had spent 11 days in the intensive care unit of the Queen Elizabeth Hospital in King’s Lynn, Norfolk, in November 2010 with septicaemia, before being discharged on to a general ward. Though he was still gravely ill – not least with a perforated bowel that he had sustained in hospital – his wife had been told he was on the mend.
http://www.telegraph.co.uk/health/9635842/Families-left-grieving-and-angry-by-the-Liverpool-Care-Pathway.html

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jwhop
Knowflake

Posts: 6158
From: Madeira Beach, FL USA
Registered: Apr 2009

posted November 01, 2012 10:08 AM     Click Here to See the Profile for jwhop     Edit/Delete Message   Reply w/Quote
TV chef's anger over mother's 'end-of-life' pathway
A TELEVISION chef has told how she stepped in after hearing that her elderly mother was on an end-of-life care pathway despite staging a dramatic recovery.
31 Oct 2012


Rustie Lee refused permission for her mother Eugenie Edwards, 87, to be placed on the Supportive Care Pathway (SCP) – similar to the controversial Liverpool Care Pathway – at Birmingham City Hospital after suffering heart and kidney failure.

She was expected to live only 48 hours but recovered enough to be discharged from hospital only six days later.

The television star said that her mother was already showing signs of improvement and was able to eat by the time she was told that doctors had placed her on the pathway.
http://www.telegraph.co.uk/health/healthnews/9646504/TV-chefs-anger-over-mothers-end-of-life-pathway.html


Family 'not told' grandmother was put on Liverpool Care Pathway
Doctors put a dying grandmother on a controversial ‘death pathway’ without telling her family, they are claiming.
By Stephen Adams, Medical Correspondent
16 Oct 2012


Mary Cooper, 79, died a few days after being put on the Liverpool Care Pathway at the Queen Elizabeth Hospital in King's Lynn, Norfolk.

The pathway, originally designed to ease the suffering of terminally ill cancer patients in their very last days, is being used more and more widely in NHS hospitals.

The idea behind the LCP is to give patients a 'good death' by avoiding unnecessary and burdensome medical interventions.

However, there have been accusations it hastens death because it can involve the removal of hydration and nutrition.

Mrs Cooper’s husband Roy, a retired train driver, said doctors only told him and his children after they had placed her on the pathway, by which stage her condition had worsened so much that she could not recover. The hospital insists the matter was discussed - and agreed - with him.
http://www.telegraph.co.uk/health/healthnews/9612091/Family-not-told-grandmother-was-put-on-Liverpool-Care-Pathway.html

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jwhop
Knowflake

Posts: 6158
From: Madeira Beach, FL USA
Registered: Apr 2009

posted November 01, 2012 10:12 AM     Click Here to See the Profile for jwhop     Edit/Delete Message   Reply w/Quote
Patient death pathway 'based on guesswork’
The controversial “death pathway” has come under renewed attack from doctors, lawyers and campaigners who said staff using it had to guess when patients were nearing the end of life.
22 Oct 2012


The Liverpool Care Pathway is aimed at providing a comfortable death for patients in their last days and hours by not subjecting them to futile treatments, but many fear it is being used inappropriately and has become “self-fulfilling”.

Campaigners have criticised a consensus statement signed by 22 organisations in support of the pathway, which said it was good medical practice and did not hasten death. In their response to the agreement, the group opposing the pathway, led by Prof Patrick Pullicino, a neurologist from East Kent Hospitals, argued that it was fatally flawed.

There was no scientific basis underpinning the prognoses that patients were dying, they said. “It is self-evident that stopping fluids whilst giving narcotics and sedatives hastens death,” the group said in a statement.

The group also pointed out that the latest pathway audit showed that just 16 per cent of patients had fluids continued on the pathway and none had fluids started. “The median time to death on the Liverpool Care Pathway is now 29 hours,” the group said. “Statistics show that even patients with terminal cancer and a poor prognosis may survive months or more if not put on the LCP.”

They added: “The fact is that there is no scientific evidence to support the diagnosis of impending death and there are no published criteria that allow this diagnosis to be made in an evidence-based manner.
http://www.telegraph.co.uk/health/healthnews/9626610/Patient-death-pathway-b ased-on-guesswork.html


Liverpool Care Pathway use 'must not be driven by other agendas'
Dr Peter Saunders from the Care Not Killing Alliance says Liverpool Care Pathway is a "very good tool" but there has to be full transparency about its use.***You mean like bonus money to kill patients?***


The technique is supposed to alleviate suffering in the final hours or days of a person’s life and can involve the removal of tubes artificially providing food and fluid.

It was rolled out across the country from 2004, however since then families have come forward saying their loved ones were placed on the pathway without their knowledge and argued they were not dying.

Research for The Daily Telegraph shows that almost two thirds of NHS trusts using the Liverpool Care Pathway have received payouts totalling millions of pounds for hitting targets related to its use.

The figures, obtained under the Freedom of Information Act, suggest that about 85 per cent of trusts have now adopted the regime.

More than six out of 10 of those trusts – just over half of the total – have received or are due to receive financial rewards for doing so amounting to at least £12 million.
http://www.telegraph.co.uk/health/9647141/Liverpool-Care-Pathway-use-must-not-be-driven-by-other-agendas.html

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