Published: 30 Jan 13 08:14 CET | Print version
Online: http://www.thelocal.se/45894/20130130/
Swedes have a better chance of surviving cancer than Britons, according to a new study examining the connection between cancer survival rates and one's willingness to visit a doctor.
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The 2013 Eurovision Song Contest Final is live in Malmö, southern Sweden. The Local brings you all the latest news, reactions, and details surrounding Europe's biggest pop music spectacle. READ () »
Sweden will be playing for gold in the ice hockey World Championships after dispatching longstanding rivals and co-hosts Finland with a 3-0 win on Saturday. READ () »
Three people were wounded during an armed robbery on a jewellery store in Ängelholm, southern Sweden on Saturday, with the robbers escaping on a yellow moped. READ () »
The Sörmland County Council in central Sweden 'accidentally' hired a convicted criminal who had served a long prison sentence for threatening to blow up oil storage tanks and had to pay 1million kronor in severance pay to get rid of him. READ () »
Panic broke out at a Gothenburg school on Friday evening as one man was wounded in a shooting which could be linked to a violent robbery that took place in the area on the same day. READ () »
A 15-year-old girl has admitted to setting up the Instagram account that caused hundreds of teenagers to riot in Gothenburg last year, but her 16-year-old friend has denied involvement. READ () »
Ice hockey World Championships co-hosts Sweden and Finland continue their long-standing rivalry on Saturday with a place in the gold medal match at stake. READ () »
The president of the Stockholm School of Economics, one of Sweden's most prestigious universities, has been forced out in response to a scandal over his hiring of a high-ranking official who'd been convicted of insider trading. READ () »
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http://www.telegraph.co.uk/health/healthnews/9755500/NHS-ageism-stopping-elderly-getting-cancer-treatment.html
My mother was 75 when she was diagnosed with pancreatic cancer in England. The NHS NEVER questioned her entitlement to treatment. She received an operation from a top specialist - given extensive after care (and into the bargain, had cataract operations on both eyes). Certainly NO age discrimination there.
My Swedish partner's mother was recently rushed to hospital for an operation - which had to be repeated, as it wasn't done properly the first time. We had enormous difficulty getting info about what was going on from medical staff - and now, bills have started arriving for the ambulance trip, soon to be followed by another one for the stay in hospital. My partner's mother is worried about finding the money.
I suppose thelocal.se loves headlines that begin "Swedes better than Brits…" My point is that I would choose to be 'ill' in the UK, rather than Sweden any day
After 4.5 years of failed treatment, made necessary by a serious of doctor's errors in diagnosis and treatment, I now need to go to the US to get quality expert care to correct the repeated failures and subsequent damage caused by a Swedish system. The Swedish healthcare system seems to have given up on cleaning up there mess in a timely and respectful manner. Perverse.
The act that finally forced me from Swedish healthcare to seek care in the US was that I was treated during the last year by a doctor that was found to be mentally (age related) incompetent soon after he provided treated. This doctor's mental incompetence and the systemic failure of the healthcare systems leadership and management that have allowed a mentally incapacitated doctor to continue practicing is just a few indications of institution-wide failure at every level and across the breadth of the healthcare system.
What should have been simple and quick treatment from the start has evolved into what will be a lifelong struggle to deal with issues caused by multiple counts of medical malpractice by a Swedish public healthcare system in North Sweden.
I suppose it is no wonder that the Swedish government has announced a complete overhaul of its laws regarding accountability and responsibility regarding healthcare systems and providers. The current laws are not only ineffective; they are also not enforced.
If you can manage the Swedish language, you search on the web to find many people in Sweden suffering unnecessarily at the hands of public healthcare systems and that my encounters and the resulting health impacts of a failed Swedish healthcare systems are all to common.
Get the real story about how poor Swedish healthcare is from this Swedish State reports in English:
www.socialstyrelsen.se/publikationer2010/2010-4-37
For example, you will see that in some Swedish systems, more than 40% of surgeries not performed in the 90 days specified by Swedish "law". I say "law" because there is no punishment for healthcare systems failing to meet the time requirements outlined in Swedish law.