May 26, 2012
Published: 21 Apr 11 16:13 CET | Double click on a word to get a translation
Online: http://www.thelocal.se/33350/20110421/
The nurse who refused to send an ambulance to a 23-year-old Stockholm man who later died had been reported several times prior to the incident.
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lång
adjective
Lång means long, tall and can be used for height, distance or time.
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I disagree with you: some 3rd world countries have better healthcare than Sweden!
Go to e.g. Thailand and you will see what I mean. Thousands of Swedes go there each year not just for beach vacations but to get some treatments they cannot get at home or they will have to wait 9 months or so....
In other words, there was a 'failsafe' procedure, but it failed with very tragic results.
It is significant the the police are involved and I trust will discover all the pertinent facts and bring appropriate charges.
Not really. It is true that there are full of problems with Swedish health care procedures, but it is not that bad as what you refereed. For your example about the doctor in US : it is quite common for medical doctors to despise each others specially in same sectors, so you should not very trust it.
@ J. L. Belmar
I am sorry about your incidents, it is painful to read it. Wish you will recover soon.
Stalin
I'm deeply sorry for the death of this young man, I'm almost his age... it's horrible and awful such a thing happened... what's wrong with this people? 'cause something like this happens in all countries but in different areas. What's wrong with people not caring about a human life anymore? You can't play with something like that, if the guy said he needed help, send it for god's sake... There's more to lose than a tank of gas. Any human life worth the caution.
It pisses me off nowadays people are so unsensitive towards other persons.
Maybe the reason you are failing to understand, is that the emergency telephone number in Sweden is 112.
I do believe you totally. I myself experienced bad medical care (care or noncare...)
numerous times in Sweden. I hate it when I call vårdcentral and have to answer
dozens of questions before I could even tell my problems. A lot of times they told
me to call back the day after...it is simply horrible. But you have probably
experienced worse moments. It is ashamed..well it is totally UNacceptable in this
case when a young man was refused an ambulance he desperately asked for. In fact he
would not have been that ill should he been treated properly right from the
beginning (referral to the specialist before it all got worse).
Now I will be totally unpatriotic and state my claim loudly:
Sweden has the worst medical care in the EU, probably the worst in the western
world. It is not because of poor technologies deployed, too few doctors or too little
money. We have enough doctors, nurses...worse still...we HAVE some of the world best
medical equipment (like eddie123 has seen) but we just cannot use it to make people
healthier. Sweden export medical tools, medicines to the world but we have very UNFIT
medical staff (as SaraMx noticed the apathy...) and the worst is probably the
attitude of medical staff in Sweden from SOS to ordinary vårdcentral. Sweden
definitely need a medical care reform especially when it comes to staff. We need a
new kind of education and training. They government should look at how other
countries do it and then learn from them. They probably do not want to admit that it
is so so bad.
Many of my friends go to Poland and Germany for dental care which is cheaper
and better. For more complicated operations and health checkups they go to Thailand!
yes they go that far because and there they get what they need (want) and feel much
better than at any vårdcentral or hospital in Sweden. In this beautiful country if
you are over 50 and want to have EKG test (your heart waves) you can just walk in any
hospital in Thailand and have it done right away (or wait a few moments). Here
(unless you are dying in a heart attack) all you can get is a wait time of weeks if
not months! There is nowhere else in the world where the state thinks it is fine that
patients can wait up to 90 days to meet a specialist.
I know. I was using 911 as a universal reference to emergency numbers.
Its highly unethical that emergency call centers in Sweden work on a bonus system to keep ambulance call outs to a minimum - that's the important point I was making.
However, my experience with Swedish healthcare has been really positive, Of course, unlike other "pay for play" healthcare systems you do sometimes need to wait which is never nice and you don't always get prioritised and treated and tested for every possible ailment at your demand.
The system functions to provide the broadest and most vital care to the most amount of people and this means that your issues don't always come first. Sweden has one of the world's most extensive medical databases to prove the effectiveness of the system for the whole society. This story is a failure of the system in my view, not a function thereof.
In all the treatments I have received (form the larger to the smaller) I have found medical personnel to be compassionate, professional and genuinely concerned about my personal wellbeing. That they have been, in addition, willing to provide me with treatment in another language and that the state even provides translators at state expense if I request, is an indication of the commitment to professional care.
Where I have experienced and worked in other "1st world" public healthcare systems, I have found it impersonal and highly bureaucratic, doctors and nurses never have time to attend to people personally (often not even physically examining patients, only filling in questionnaires) and many problems go undiagnosed and caught up in the red tape. "Files" (not patients) are handled by multiple personnel often resulting in persons making diagnoses and giving treatment never having actually met the patient. Carers are inflexible to offer treatment in other languages never mind offer free translation services. And if you are outside of the system, i.e. a non-citizen, forget it!
In contrast, my experience of the system here is fair, professional, personal and highly democratic.
I can hardly see how 911 is a universal reference to emergency numbers, when it is only for north america. I would have thought that 112 is more a universal reference to emergency numbers, as it is used by the European Union and on GSM mobile networks across the world.
You are the exception of the rule if you are not working at a hospital. For your information, not one of the doctors performing the wrong surgeries in my legs, came EVER TO SEE ME and just to say "hello José, how are we doing?" The whole situation was so weird and so badly handled that the Head of the medical department reconized to my wife and me that I had not been properly taken care of. The whole Kafkanian story is now in the hands of the "Socialstyrelsen" and let us see what they will answer. They already recognized that my cse is a horrible story of mistreating. I have to say that the doctor who operated my left leg for the third time is simply out of this world. She did what the rest never did.
Now, to all of those who hve been mistreated at the Swedish hospitals by doctors and nurses, what about organizing a massive pacific demonstration in front of the Karolinska in Solna with posters saying: "WAKE UP! WE NEED BETTER SERVICES.
My heart goes out to you Belmar. Sure sounds like an ordeal.
You needn't take my comments personally if they represent a different perspective from your own. I don't work in healthcare in Sweden at all - I have merely interacted with the system and the personnel as patient and have had positive experiences, especially considering what I believe to be a generally high standard of care for a public system. Obviously cases like this, and your own, show the flaws and failures in the system and of the personnel at times.
I think organising your complaints in demonstration sounds like a good idea, and certainly holding the individuals accountable by reporting their negligence to the medical council.