Alison Young

ShoppingTelly

Help Support ShoppingTelly:

For chronic health conditions such as we understand Ali Y has (and Simon and Julia) I can't imagine how they keep tabs on any significant changes in the condition or conditions they have.
It seems to me the NHS is a victim of massive scope creep. No wonder so many health care trusts are permanently teetering on the brink of financial crisis.
There has been a wilful neglect of fundamentals: ensuring a steady stream of new GPs, as the doctors recruited from around the Commonwealth all joined at a similar time so have reached retirement at broadly the same time... similarly there is a problem with pharmacists at a time when one of the tactics to relieve pressure on the NHS is to turn more and more to pharmacists.
Pharmacy staff are increasingly under attack in a similar way to staff in the paramedic, ambulance and A&E services.
More and more new treatments become available each year, often at huge cost.
At some point they need to reassess what is within the "free at the point of delivery" offer, and how the remainder will be funded.
I'd hate to see a full-scale collapse of the NHS, but if successive governments continue to shirk the difficult decisions, I fear that's what's ahead of us. That could open the door for the corporate profiteering which makes US healthcare so horrifying and heartless.
Throwing money at it clearly isn't the simple solution as Tony Blair and Gordon Brown pumped incredible amounts of money into it and didn't turn it around.
As much as we all can, we need to advocate for ourselves. We need to be terrier-like in pursuing tests to get the correct diagnosis and treatment.
And get that treatment before we develop the dreaded co-morbidities that ramp up the cost of treating patients.
Prevention and early intervention could slash the costs, yet nothing is invested in either area.
 
You must have been at my surgery. It's like that there.

My last asthma check up was the in surgery pharmacist, sp, phoning and chatting with me. She suggested I only take one puff of the inhaler twice a day. I told her I did on advice some years back and the next time I saw the doctor was told no 2 puffs twice a day if I don't get a chest infection. If chest infection, increase to 6 puffs 4 times a day plus the grey inhaler on top. I still do the two puffs twice a day.
At my last appointment with the asthma nurse a few years ago (where is she now and what is she doing?) I was told to change from using an inhaler as and when to using a steroid inhaler. I stopped using all inhalers as I don't like taking steroids and haven't felt as good or breathed as freely in years. I haven't had a flu jab since I landed in hospital as a result of allergic reaction ten plus years ago. I'm not saying everyone should stop all medication immediately - obviously that's dangerous and unsafe for a lot of conditions - just that my body seemed to need a rest and is healing itself better. Long may it last.
 
Mine are Clenil Modulite 100 which I use daily. The grey one is Salbutamol 100 this one I only use when needed. I had to start using it just before Xmas as I seemed to develop a bit of a rattle first thing in the morning and a heavy feeling, which has now settled down again.

I also have to use a nasal inhaler, Avmys 27.3 every day.
Are these Cortisone sprays?
 

Latest posts

Back
Top