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Author Topic: Old age - poverty - and cataracts  (Read 939 times)

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pscocoa

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Old age - poverty - and cataracts
« on: 31 January 2012, 17:06:31 »

I have developed a cataract and it needs surgery - do I go private or NHS?

Anybody had cataracts sorted and what was experience on having it dealt with?

As far as I can see (ha ha) if you go private you get a consultant to do the job - if you go NHS you might get a trainee doing the job with same consultant stood next to trainee.

I will probably go for NHS and kick up a fuss about having consultant only.

Lesson - wear sun glasses more regularly
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Re: Old age - poverty - and cataracts
« Reply #1 on: 31 January 2012, 17:13:08 »

My mother had her's done when she was 98, NHS job, doesn't need glasses now and coming upto 104.
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Olympia5776

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Re: Old age - poverty - and cataracts
« Reply #2 on: 31 January 2012, 17:19:00 »

My mother had her's done when she was 98, NHS job, doesn't need glasses now and coming upto 104.

Just in from a miserable day ,sat down and read that and it cheered me up no end.
She must be a remarkable lady . :y
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D

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Re: Old age - poverty - and cataracts
« Reply #3 on: 31 January 2012, 17:27:18 »

I have developed a cataract and it needs surgery - do I go private or NHS?

Anybody had cataracts sorted and what was experience on having it dealt with?

As far as I can see (ha ha) if you go private you get a consultant to do the job - if you go NHS you might get a trainee doing the job with same consultant stood next to trainee.

I will probably go for NHS and kick up a fuss about having consultant only.

Lesson - wear sun glasses more regularly

If you go private you could get a rubbish consultant doing it or you could go NHS and have a superb trainee doing it. Dont always assume that a consultant is better when it comes to surgery. Plus a catract surgery is probably the simplest of the lot. The trainees are also quite experienced by the time they get to that stage.

When my wife needed an epidural I made sure a registrar did it rather than a consultant. Reason being its such a simple procedure that trainees do hundreds of them, consultants do the odd one when someone kicks up a fuss and usually struggle.

Now if it was a cardiac bypass then its different!
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Taxi_Driver

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Re: Old age - poverty - and cataracts
« Reply #4 on: 31 January 2012, 18:35:19 »

I know my local private hospital does cataracts in bulk, ie books in between 30-50 patients for the  day and the same consultant does the lot in production line style :o

Dont think id like to be no 50 on the list  :o 
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Rods2

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Re: Old age - poverty - and cataracts
« Reply #5 on: 31 January 2012, 23:28:31 »

or the first, on the day after his birthday.  :o
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