Daily review 02/08/2024

Written By: - Date published: 5:30 pm, August 2nd, 2024 - 9 comments
Categories: Daily review - Tags:

Daily review is also your post.

This provides Standardistas the opportunity to review events of the day.

The usual rules of good behaviour apply (see the Policy).

Don’t forget to be kind to each other …

9 comments on “Daily review 02/08/2024 ”

  1. SPC 1

    Michaela Blyde has taken her girl crush too far.

    Though Zoe Hobbes appreciates the effort to clear a path to a position in the final.

    The found her idol in her bag at Paris airport.

    https://www.stuff.co.nz/sport/350364876/watch-michaela-blyde-names-gold-medal-after-jamaican-sprinter

  2. tWig 2

    RNZ report on doctors at Hutt Hospital being asked to make beds.

    “Clinical staff are expected to clean, among other things, commodes, hoists and patient washbowls, as well as beds, lockers, soap dispensers, sluice sinks and biohazard bags.”

    ‘One doctor, who RNZ has agreed not to name, said: “One shift I made seven beds, answered a million phone calls, and fixed the printer. Is this a really good use of my time? I suspect I’m the most expensive person there.”‘

  3. Vivie 3

    Doctors continue to reveal the true situation regarding the lack of sufficient hospital staff numbers, despite the best efforts of the Government and Te Whatu Ora to confuse and deceive the public.

    https://www.rnz.co.nz/news/national/523895/northland-cancer-specialist-speaks-out-on-shortages

    "A Northland-based cancer specialist says fancy new drugs and the so-called "faster treatment times" will not do any good to his patients, who are missing out on the basics now.

    It was a story in The Northern Advocate this week, which that spurred medical oncologist Edmond Ang to speak publicly.

    "Reading it, I suffered like a post-traumatic stress attack. My blood pressure probably hit the ceiling, I was nauseated and really distressed.

    "What really infuriated me was the hypocrisy and the spin by upper management."

    The story quoted Health New Zealand's director of operations for Te Tai Tokerau, Alex Pimm, as saying "staff vacancies had affected wait times for initial cancer treatments but patients were prioritised based on their clinical urgency, so those more urgent were seen more quickly".

    Dr Ang said Northland's medical oncology team got the go-ahead to recruit another specialist last year.

    With the funding of new immunotherapies 18 months ago, money had been put aside to employ new staff to deliver them.

    The role was advertised internationally, and after several months, two applicants applied and one was keen…..

    "Unfortunately a few weeks ago we received the final result of all the appeals and all the business cases that we've submitted, and we've been told that role will not be signed off.

    "And so, that person who we've been trying to recruit for a year, has finally taken up a different position."…..

    Dr Ang expected to be disciplined by upper management for speaking publicly, but said his contract with his patients came first.

    "I love my job as a medical oncologist, I care for my patients … if my patient dies, a little part of me dies"…..

  4. tWig 4

    The story of the Brazilian silver medaller one point behind Simone Biles in Olympic gymnastics.

    Rebeca Andrade was a favela child who benefitted from sports programmes for poor kids.

    “Gymnastics is very tough. You don’t get holidays, you train on Saturdays, you have little vacation time. So, people in Brazil with a lot of money — they don’t want their kids to do gymnastics. They want to travel on weekends, they want long vacations. This doesn’t work in gymnastics,” said [coach] Vidor. “So instead, you get parents who see gymnastics as a way for their kids to have a better life, to travel, to get better education, to have access to better doctors. It becomes a way to achieve their dreams.”