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#1
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The triumphalist attitude of many British workers
I had a hernia op yesterday. On arrival at the hospital I was asked a
number of pre-op questions by one of the nursing staff. I referred to the leaflet which states that the hospital will be able to organise return transport a day later (I had to stay in overnight due to GA). But the nurse said "No way!" Not on a Saturday. Out of the question. It was the triumphalist way she conveyed this that annoyed me. Anyway, I said nothing. After the op the staff nurse on the actual ward asked me how I was getting home and again I referred to the note in the leaflet. However, this nurse immediately agreed and said she would organise some hospital transport for me. She couldn't have been more helpful or willing, as were ALL the nurses on the actual ward. About three hours ago I was brought home and am now recuperating. Another example of this strange habit some British people have of celebrating someone's misfortune: In a Wilkinson shop the other day I asked whether they had any holdalls. "No, all gone!" she said with glee, as if to say, "Now see where else you're going to get one from!" Not a "Terribly sorry, but we're sold out of them right now, although we should be getting fresh stock in soon." What IS it with these people? Most people I deal with, even in Tesco, are helpful, polite, forthcoming, but occasionally one meets up with a complete tosser, who, sadly, often is a woman, even though women are supposed to care more. MM |
#2
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The triumphalist attitude of many British workers
MM wrote:
I had a hernia op yesterday. On arrival at the hospital I was asked a number of pre-op questions by one of the nursing staff. I referred to the leaflet which states that the hospital will be able to organise return transport a day later (I had to stay in overnight due to GA). But the nurse said "No way!" Not on a Saturday. Out of the question. It was the triumphalist way she conveyed this that annoyed me. Anyway, I said nothing. After the op the staff nurse on the actual ward asked me how I was getting home and again I referred to the note in the leaflet. However, this nurse immediately agreed and said she would organise some hospital transport for me. She couldn't have been more helpful or willing, as were ALL the nurses on the actual ward. About three hours ago I was brought home and am now recuperating. Another example of this strange habit some British people have of celebrating someone's misfortune: In a Wilkinson shop the other day I asked whether they had any holdalls. "No, all gone!" she said with glee, as if to say, "Now see where else you're going to get one from!" Not a "Terribly sorry, but we're sold out of them right now, although we should be getting fresh stock in soon." What IS it with these people? Most people I deal with, even in Tesco, are helpful, polite, forthcoming, but occasionally one meets up with a complete tosser, who, sadly, often is a woman, even though women are supposed to care more. Only because you just meet more women than men in a hospital and Tescos. It's the other way around in the building trade. Get well soon. -- Adam |
#3
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The triumphalist attitude of many British workers
On 17/09/2011 15:36, ARWadsworth wrote:
wrote: I had a hernia op yesterday. On arrival at the hospital I was asked a number of pre-op questions by one of the nursing staff. I referred to the leaflet which states that the hospital will be able to organise return transport a day later (I had to stay in overnight due to GA). But the nurse said "No way!" Not on a Saturday. Out of the question. It was the triumphalist way she conveyed this that annoyed me. Anyway, I said nothing. After the op the staff nurse on the actual ward asked me how I was getting home and again I referred to the note in the leaflet. However, this nurse immediately agreed and said she would organise some hospital transport for me. She couldn't have been more helpful or willing, as were ALL the nurses on the actual ward. About three hours ago I was brought home and am now recuperating. Another example of this strange habit some British people have of celebrating someone's misfortune: In a Wilkinson shop the other day I asked whether they had any holdalls. "No, all gone!" she said with glee, as if to say, "Now see where else you're going to get one from!" Not a "Terribly sorry, but we're sold out of them right now, although we should be getting fresh stock in soon." What IS it with these people? Most people I deal with, even in Tesco, are helpful, polite, forthcoming, but occasionally one meets up with a complete tosser, who, sadly, often is a woman, even though women are supposed to care more. Only because you just meet more women than men in a hospital and Tescos. It's the other way around in the building trade. I'm not sure that it's just that. I work in Engineering, which is almost exclusively male (although it is changing), and over twenty-odd years have only met a few nasty, difficult or stupid *******s. My wife on the other hand works in the NHS and yes, there a more women than men - but the number of those women that are vicious, bullying, uncaring bitches is staggering. SteveW |
#4
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The triumphalist attitude of many British workers
My ex-wife is a social worker. She tells me that http://www.clareinthecommunity.co.uk/
is actually an ongoing documentary. JGH |
#5
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The triumphalist attitude of many British workers
In article
, jgharston writes My ex-wife is a social worker. She tells me that http://www.clareinthecommunity.co.uk/ is actually an ongoing documentary. I used to know someone who was a cebwrpg znatyre for social services and he was of a similar view. Adrian -- To Reply : replace "news" with "adrian" and "nospam" with "ffoil" Sorry for the rigmarole, If I want spam, I'll go to the shops Every time someone says "I don't believe in trolls", another one dies. |
#6
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The triumphalist attitude of many British workers
On Sep 17, 10:01*pm, Steve Walker -
family.me.uk wrote: I work in Engineering, which is almost exclusively male (although it is changing), and over twenty-odd years have only met a few nasty, difficult or stupid *******s. My wife on the other hand works in the NHS and yes, there a more women than men - but the number of those women that are vicious, bullying, uncaring bitches is staggering. Medical professionalism requires a distancing from the patient, unfortunately it can also prove a hiding ground for those who have a pathological lack of empathy, focused on pay & "whatever happens I still get paid" (and more often than not upper middle class bitches :-) Eugenics is also alive and well. The worst medical staff are social climbers, the patient is incidental to their god complex and if you sense your well being is under one of those "get a second opinion". Then there are those who are both competent & have empathy, tending to choose medicine for the security as "bottom line"; nurses who are tireless and doctors who walk the hospitals night & day double checking. Vetinary are, for the most part, superior to medicine in both ability and have strong empathy. Not untrue to say a vet will spot disease whilst medicine will spot social class first. Engineers tend to be the most pragmatic. Investing & Banking attracts very extreme types, whose complete psychological makeup is extreme with the result that sound external risk management is necessary - because they themselves can rarely exercise it sufficiently especially in a herd environment. Politicians meanwhile seem cognitively challenged by virtue of power being the first requirement. |
#7
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The triumphalist attitude of many British workers
On Sat, 17 Sep 2011 14:41:13 -0700 (PDT), "js.b1"
wrote: On Sep 17, 10:01*pm, Steve Walker - family.me.uk wrote: I work in Engineering, which is almost exclusively male (although it is changing), and over twenty-odd years have only met a few nasty, difficult or stupid *******s. My wife on the other hand works in the NHS and yes, there a more women than men - but the number of those women that are vicious, bullying, uncaring bitches is staggering. Medical professionalism requires a distancing from the patient, unfortunately it can also prove a hiding ground for those who have a pathological lack of empathy, focused on pay & "whatever happens I still get paid" (and more often than not upper middle class bitches :-) Eugenics is also alive and well. The worst medical staff are social climbers, the patient is incidental to their god complex and if you sense your well being is under one of those "get a second opinion". Then there are those who are both competent & have empathy, tending to choose medicine for the security as "bottom line"; nurses who are tireless and doctors who walk the hospitals night & day double checking. Vetinary are, for the most part, superior to medicine in both ability and have strong empathy. Not untrue to say a vet will spot disease whilst medicine will spot social class first. Engineers tend to be the most pragmatic. Investing & Banking attracts very extreme types, whose complete psychological makeup is extreme with the result that sound external risk management is necessary - because they themselves can rarely exercise it sufficiently especially in a herd environment. Politicians meanwhile seem cognitively challenged by virtue of power being the first requirement. I belong in the 'engineer' category! I did a seven-year apprenticeship as a motor fitter on leaving school at 15. Since then I have done other jobs, but I can still turn my hand to most things mechanical. MM |
#8
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The triumphalist attitude of many British workers
On Sun, 18 Sep 2011 05:52:38 +0100, MM wrote:
I belong in the 'engineer' category! I did a seven-year apprenticeship as a motor fitter on leaving school at 15 Feck, they were taking the ****. |
#9
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The triumphalist attitude of many British workers
Steve Walker wrote:
On 17/09/2011 15:36, ARWadsworth wrote: wrote: I had a hernia op yesterday. On arrival at the hospital I was asked a number of pre-op questions by one of the nursing staff. I referred to the leaflet which states that the hospital will be able to organise return transport a day later (I had to stay in overnight due to GA). But the nurse said "No way!" Not on a Saturday. Out of the question. It was the triumphalist way she conveyed this that annoyed me. Anyway, I said nothing. After the op the staff nurse on the actual ward asked me how I was getting home and again I referred to the note in the leaflet. However, this nurse immediately agreed and said she would organise some hospital transport for me. She couldn't have been more helpful or willing, as were ALL the nurses on the actual ward. About three hours ago I was brought home and am now recuperating. Another example of this strange habit some British people have of celebrating someone's misfortune: In a Wilkinson shop the other day I asked whether they had any holdalls. "No, all gone!" she said with glee, as if to say, "Now see where else you're going to get one from!" Not a "Terribly sorry, but we're sold out of them right now, although we should be getting fresh stock in soon." What IS it with these people? Most people I deal with, even in Tesco, are helpful, polite, forthcoming, but occasionally one meets up with a complete tosser, who, sadly, often is a woman, even though women are supposed to care more. Only because you just meet more women than men in a hospital and Tescos. It's the other way around in the building trade. I'm not sure that it's just that. I work in Engineering, which is almost exclusively male (although it is changing), and over twenty-odd years have only met a few nasty, difficult or stupid *******s. My wife on the other hand works in the NHS and yes, there a more women than men - but the number of those women that are vicious, bullying, uncaring bitches is staggering. +1 SteveW |
#10
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The triumphalist attitude of many British workers
Steve Walker wrote:
Only because you just meet more women than men in a hospital and Tescos. It's the other way around in the building trade. I'm not sure that it's just that. I work in Engineering, which is almost exclusively male (although it is changing), and over twenty-odd years have only met a few nasty, difficult or stupid *******s. So you never did a job for the council then? -- Adam |
#11
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The triumphalist attitude of many British workers
"ARWadsworth" wrote in message ... Steve Walker wrote: Only because you just meet more women than men in a hospital and Tescos. It's the other way around in the building trade. I'm not sure that it's just that. I work in Engineering, which is almost exclusively male (although it is changing), and over twenty-odd years have only met a few nasty, difficult or stupid *******s. So you never did a job for the council then? -- Adam I know from experience that sometimes that attitude is caused by managers or accountants. They have never done the job but are experts at cutting stock or staff. They have just enough staff to cope when everything is going OK. Then when it snows & everyone is complaining, the people responsible are in their warm offices not on the front line taking the abuse "also that stock has been disposed of because we have not used any in nine months". Never mind it is only used in winter. Having told them, one can't help looking triumphant when it all goes wrong. Robbie |
#12
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The triumphalist attitude of many British workers
Roberts wrote:
I know from experience that sometimes that attitude is caused by managers or accountants. They have never done the job but are experts at cutting stock or staff. It's always the managers that are the ******s. -- Adam |
#13
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The triumphalist attitude of many British workers
What IS it with these people? It's the jubilation of the workshy that they won't actually have to do anything. Subsequent to their comment, it's your civic duty to make them run around for something obscure and when you finally prod them all the way through to grudging completion - to tell them you've changed your main. |
#14
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The triumphalist attitude of many British workers
On Sat, 17 Sep 2011 07:56:41 -0700 (PDT), Dom Ostrowski
wrote: What IS it with these people? It's the jubilation of the workshy that they won't actually have to do anything. I don't necessarily regard them as workshy, ISTM for them it's a matter of principal. There seems to be an all pervading attitude by individuals in institutions like the NHS that they will decide what services are delivered to the patients and when. It is their refuge. I have several serious health problems and have had a lot of dealings with clinical depts inc A&E. Having had a collapse 230 miles from home a consultant in A&E at the outset made a point of saying I could look forward to a lot of disruption and delay in getting back home and to work. It turned out the entire delay was due to waiting for a couple of tests for which there were waiting lists, despite the fact I was a perfectly healthy patient tying up a bed. So 6 days wait for a gastroscopy which was negative so I was then put on the waiting list for a colonoscopy, another 6 days wait result also negative, (the possibility of booking both investigations at the outset had not even been considered). Most people can't work like that. Then a 3 day wait for the doctor to sign off my discharge, eventually to be discharged at 6-00pm on a Friday (after waiting 2 hours for my medication) after 12 quite unnecessary nights as an in-patient. As a final "Coupe de grace" they told me I must not drive until a diagnosis had been achieved. They referred me to a department closer to home for further investigations with a radio pill TV camera ... 9 weeks later I had heard nothing and phoned them up. They said "It's OK you've been marked up as urgent". So I asked "What does that mean?" she said we see you sooner than we would have done if you weren't urgent. I said "Well how long would it take to see me if I were not urgent?" and the secretary said 13 weeks. After 11 weeks I got my appointment to be told they didn't do that particular investigation there, but there was no reason why I could not drive if I wanted. The cost of my absence to my small company was about 18k in lost business and locum charges. Subsequent to their comment, it's your civic duty to make them run around for something obscure and when you finally prod them all the way through to grudging completion - to tell them you've changed your main. Derek G |
#15
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The triumphalist attitude of many British workers
On Sat, 17 Sep 2011 22:52:16 +0100, Derek Geldard wrote:
On Sat, 17 Sep 2011 07:56:41 -0700 (PDT), Dom Ostrowski wrote: What IS it with these people? It's the jubilation of the workshy that they won't actually have to do anything. I don't necessarily regard them as workshy, ISTM for them it's a matter of principal. There seems to be an all pervading attitude by individuals in institutions like the NHS that they will decide what services are delivered to the patients and when. It is their refuge. I've always thought that applied to many workers in councils. There are professional exceptions (e.g. BCOs) but the average worker seems to be someone who wasn't good enough to get a job elsewhere. They have a low paid and boring job, and make it bearable by using and abusing any power they have. -- Use the BIG mirror service in the UK: http://www.mirrorservice.org *lightning protection* - a w_tom conductor |
#16
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The triumphalist attitude of many British workers
On 17/09/2011 15:19, MM wrote: I had a hernia op yesterday. On arrival at the hospital I was asked a number of pre-op questions by one of the nursing staff. I referred to the leaflet which states that the hospital will be able to organise return transport a day later (I had to stay in overnight due to GA). But the nurse said "No way!" Not on a Saturday. Out of the question. It was the triumphalist way she conveyed this that annoyed me. Anyway, I said nothing. After the op the staff nurse on the actual ward asked me how I was getting home and again I referred to the note in the leaflet. However, this nurse immediately agreed and said she would organise some hospital transport for me. She couldn't have been more helpful or willing, as were ALL the nurses on the actual ward. I have had similar experiences - the last time I was in hospital I asked for something to be done and was told that it was completely out of the question in a tone which implied that I was stupid to even ask. A few minutes later an older nurse came in and just did it without me having to ask. About three hours ago I was brought home and am now recuperating. Another example of this strange habit some British people have of celebrating someone's misfortune: In a Wilkinson shop the other day I asked whether they had any holdalls. "No, all gone!" she said with glee, as if to say, "Now see where else you're going to get one from!" Not a "Terribly sorry, but we're sold out of them right now, although we should be getting fresh stock in soon." What IS it with these people? Most people I deal with, even in Tesco, are helpful, polite, forthcoming, but occasionally one meets up with a complete tosser, Some people are complete ******* and even those that aren't will sometimes be in a bad mood, possibly for very good reasons which you are not aware of. |
#17
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The triumphalist attitude of many British workers
In article , Gareth
scribeth thus On 17/09/2011 15:19, MM wrote: I had a hernia op yesterday. On arrival at the hospital I was asked a number of pre-op questions by one of the nursing staff. I referred to the leaflet which states that the hospital will be able to organise return transport a day later (I had to stay in overnight due to GA). But the nurse said "No way!" Not on a Saturday. Out of the question. It was the triumphalist way she conveyed this that annoyed me. Anyway, I said nothing. After the op the staff nurse on the actual ward asked me how I was getting home and again I referred to the note in the leaflet. However, this nurse immediately agreed and said she would organise some hospital transport for me. She couldn't have been more helpful or willing, as were ALL the nurses on the actual ward. I have had similar experiences - the last time I was in hospital I asked for something to be done and was told that it was completely out of the question in a tone which implied that I was stupid to even ask. A few minutes later an older nurse came in and just did it without me having to ask. Yep when I was in hosp a could of years ago there was a lump of steel stuck in my hand apart from all the other grief, none of them apart from a much older lady nurse would touch it she managed to get it out fine with a pair of tweezers but told e not to mention it to anyone there that she did that.. Seems that it wasn't their job to do that sort of thing and the management told them that and not to. Mind you getting a doctor to do it wasn't on the cards their visits were shall we say not all that often;!.... -- Tony Sayer |
#18
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The triumphalist attitude of many British workers
tony sayer wrote:
In article , Gareth scribeth thus Yep when I was in hosp a could of years ago there was a lump of steel stuck in my hand apart from all the other grief, none of them apart from a much older lady nurse would touch it she managed to get it out fine with a pair of tweezers but told e not to mention it to anyone there that she did that.. Seems that it wasn't their job to do that sort of thing and the management told them that and not to. Mind you getting a doctor to do it wasn't on the cards their visits were shall we say not all that often;!.... Thankfully, some people will always want to help others. Unfortunately there will always be people with precariously held positions of authority who's remit seems solely to be to tell them not to! -- What else are opposable thumbs for? Get to me at masterfix{at}btinternet{dot}com |
#19
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The triumphalist attitude of many British workers
On Sat, 17 Sep 2011 18:27:20 +0100, tony sayer
wrote: I have had similar experiences - the last time I was in hospital I asked for something to be done and was told that it was completely out of the question in a tone which implied that I was stupid to even ask. A few minutes later an older nurse came in and just did it without me having to ask. Yep when I was in hosp a could of years ago there was a lump of steel stuck in my hand apart from all the other grief, none of them apart from a much older lady nurse would touch it she managed to get it out fine with a pair of tweezers but told e not to mention it to anyone there that she did that.. Project2000 is to blame for a lot of that attitude. |
#20
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The triumphalist attitude of many British workers
On Sep 17, 6:27*pm, tony sayer wrote:
In article , Gareth scribeth thus On 17/09/2011 15:19, MM wrote: I had a hernia op yesterday. On arrival at the hospital I was asked a number of pre-op questions by one of the nursing staff. I referred to the leaflet which states that the hospital will be able to organise return transport a day later (I had to stay in overnight due to GA). But the nurse said "No way!" Not on a Saturday. Out of the question. It was the triumphalist way she conveyed this that annoyed me. Anyway, I said nothing. After the op the staff nurse on the actual ward asked me how I was getting home and again I referred to the note in the leaflet. However, this nurse immediately agreed and said she would organise some hospital transport for me. She couldn't have been more helpful or willing, as were ALL the nurses on the actual ward. I have had similar experiences - the last time I was in hospital I asked for something to be done and was told that it was completely out of the question in a tone which implied that I was stupid to even ask. *A few minutes later an older nurse came in and just did it without me having to ask. Yep when I was in hosp a could of years ago there was a lump of steel stuck in my hand apart from all the other grief, none of them apart from a much older lady nurse would touch it she managed to get it out fine with a pair of tweezers but told e not to mention it to anyone there that she did that.. Seems that it wasn't their job to do that sort of thing and the management told them that and not to. Mind you getting a doctor to do it wasn't on the cards their visits were shall we say not all that often;!.... -- Tony Sayer- Hide quoted text - - Show quoted text - You can blame the compensation culture for that sort of thing. |
#21
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The triumphalist attitude of many British workers
Seems that it wasn't their job to do that sort of thing and the management told them that and not to. Mind you getting a doctor to do it wasn't on the cards their visits were shall we say not all that often;!.... -- Tony Sayer- Hide quoted text - - Show quoted text - You can blame the compensation culture for that sort of thing. Well I was in a hospital and they had done some fine needlework patching up large lacerations elsewhere and pinning broken bones and skull all I wanted was a rather nagging splinter removed they didn't notice as I was in a coma when they were sorting the other stuff!.. I'd have DIY'ed it if I had the tools to hand;-!... -- Tony Sayer |
#22
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The triumphalist attitude of many British workers
tony sayer wrote:
Well I was in a hospital and they had done some fine needlework patching up large lacerations elsewhere and pinning broken bones and skull all I wanted was a rather nagging splinter removed they didn't notice as I was in a coma when they were sorting the other stuff!.. I'd have DIY'ed it if I had the tools to hand;-!... Nice one:-) -- Adam |
#23
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The triumphalist attitude of many British workers
In article , MM
writes After the op the staff nurse on the actual ward asked me how I was getting home and again I referred to the note in the leaflet. However, this nurse immediately agreed and said she would organise some hospital transport for me. She couldn't have been more helpful or willing, as were ALL the nurses on the actual ward. Dear dear granddad, wrong group again, or have the threats of garrotting for your off topic rants frightened you away from your usual haunts. -- fred FIVE TV's superbright logo - not the DOG's, it's ******** |
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The triumphalist attitude of many British workers
On 09/17/2011 04:28 PM, fred wrote:
Dear dear granddad, wrong group again, or have the threats of garrotting for your off topic rants frightened you away from your usual haunts. It's interesting though, how often the OT posts get most responses! ;-) Andy C |
#25
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The triumphalist attitude of many British workers
On Sep 17, 4:33*pm, Andy Cap wrote:
On 09/17/2011 04:28 PM, fred wrote: Dear dear granddad, wrong group again, or have the threats of garrotting for your off topic rants frightened you away from your usual haunts. It's interesting though, how often the OT posts get most responses! *;-) Andy C DIY is mostly done of neccesity and can be a bit boring. Still, we now have a captive poster/audience! ('til he gets well) I used to workin the NHS. (Not medical) In days of yore, nurses used to start off scrubbing the floor and emptying bed pans. Nowadays they arrive with a degree and no idea/inclination of how to care for patients. |
#26
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The triumphalist attitude of many British workers
On 09/17/2011 03:19 PM, MM wrote:
What IS it with these people? Most people I deal with, even in Tesco, are helpful, polite, forthcoming, but occasionally one meets up with a complete tosser, who, sadly, often is a woman, even though women are supposed to care more. MM Our next door neighbour has just had a baby. Thought it was arriving at 3:00AM and got a taxi to the hospital - they haven't got a car. On arrival the midwife ??? was asleep at the nurse's station and after a quick check sent her home again, telling her to come in a 9:00AM At 7:30 she's on the kitchen floor close to having the baby and they have to call for an ambulance to return her to the hospital. How can someone on a maternity ward not know a baby is imminently due ? I reckon she just didn't want to be bothered with it on night duty. Andy C |
#27
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The triumphalist attitude of many British workers
On Sat, 17 Sep 2011 15:19:37 +0100, MM wrote:
What IS it with these people? Most people I deal with, even in Tesco, are helpful, polite, forthcoming, but occasionally one meets up with a complete tosser, who, sadly, often is a woman, even though women are supposed to care more. As in usenet, so in life. As we can see here, approx 5% are eejits and the percentage in stores is the same. One maxim to bear in mind: The world will never be short of arseholes. |
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