Last week I spent a day at a London hospital. I couldn’t help comparing the care there with the care here. Comparisons between hospitals are difficult. There are many factors involved, culture and money being the two most prominent, but certainly we are supposed to be a caring people and we have spent much money on healthcare over the last 25 years, enough to warrant some form of decent public healthcare but the question is do we receive adequate healthcare in our public hospitals?
I think not.
First, the buildings. The London hospital was not the most modern but it is clean and refreshing with high ceilings, large windows that let in light, a well-lit enormous central atrium, pastel-coloured walls, colourful plastic floor tiles that are easy to clean and easy access to the receptionist’s area and doctor’s offices. There’s lots of people movement but little crowding. Staff is efficient but friendly. We got into an elevator and the young nurse already there asked us for our floor and pressed the button with a smile. That has never happened to me in any Trinidad hospital.
Second, organisation. Everyone seemed to be working quietly and efficiently. The appointment system worked. There was almost no waiting. I saw someone who had four different appointments that morning. Bloods at 8.30. Done. Consultant at 9.45. Done with lab results available. Injections at 10.45. Done. Tablets from the pharmacy at noon. All done simply and without fuss.
Third, attitude. I never saw any staff on their phone. No one stood around chatting about the latest bacchanal and getting in the way of patient flow, yet, they are friendlier than our people, who are supposed to be among the friendliest in the world. Not anymore. Cleaning of the floor was done before patients arrived and certainly not in the midst of patients arriving and trying to get to the receptionist’s desk. People were quickly acknowledged at reception. Doctors came out of their offices to call patients, on many occasions introducing themselves by their first name. At times, it was difficult to tell the difference between doctors and patients. During the several hours I spent observing in the reception area, people were offered free drinks, tea of course, and biscuits.
There was more warmth in this English hospital than in ours. And far more efficiency. On several occasions, I saw administrators walking through clinics.
Fourth, administration. Compare the above with the absence of administrators in our dilapidated waiting areas that haven’t changed since colonial times, where the antique benches haven’t been changed, the walls painted, the floors cleaned, the dust in the corners removed, for years. Where one has to struggle to get to reception because all of the patients are given appointments for the same time.
Fifth, junior doctors who walk around refusing eye contact, heads in the air, cloaked in false pride, not acknowledging or interacting with their patients.
Pride is not that you are a doctor. Pride is in your sense of duty to your patient. Pride is in the sense of joy that you are taking proper care of them. Respect is not earned because you graduated from medical school. Respect is earned the hard way. Patient by patient. Mistake by mistake until at the end of the day you can look back and say with satisfaction, I did my best.
Do we have good doctors? Of course, we do. I weekly interact with some of the most senior doctors in T&T who work in the public sector. They are friendly, competent, hard-working and as good as anyone, anywhere.
The main problem, however, is administration who do not understand what modern healthcare is about. Who do not walk around clinics and see what the problems are. Who do not know what it is to be sick and have to wait for six hours in depressing surroundings that haven’t upgraded since 1962.
Little has changed in the administration of health since 1962. Change is important. It opens the mind to something different, often better. No change stifles the mind and surroundings.
When administrators and politicians say people will not change, for example, in the appointment system, that is insulting. If properly and respectfully done, they will.
That’s the colonial mentality that led doctors to say in 1980 that our mothers would not want to spend time with their children to orally rehydrate them. They did. It’s what led to our political leaders refusing to trust people to do the correct things during the COVID pandemic and resulted in the prolonged lockdown of the country with its attendant ills.
Trust people, work with them and we will have a public health system that we can be proud of. Just like the English.