Labour to eliminate NHS trolley waits
But Tories counter with pay-and-display proposal
by Geoff Pattison
Acting on a £20 million report produced by a working party of the
Prime Minister’s friends, Health Secretary Alan Milburn will announce today
that he has ended at a stroke the scandal of patients waiting on hospital
trolleys.
A Labour peer and former flatmate of the Prime Minister’s said: "This is
a big boost for Britain and for British jobs." His Taiwan-based company is
believed to have won the contract from the NHS to produce 3.89 million signs
reading KEEP OFF THIS TROLLEY!.
Another of his companies, based in Eastern Europe, will train hospital
doctors to fix two of the signs to each trolley. "Doubling up on the signs is
the key," he said. "In trials with a single sign per trolley, some patients
pretended they hadn’t seen it, or covered it up by lying on it."
Tony Blair, speaking from the other side of the world where he is waging
the War Against Intolerance™ said: "This proves that we keep our
promises, not like the Tories. There will be no return to boom and bust
under this administration."
The Shadow Health Secretary, who cannot be named because nobody knows who
he is, was less enthusiastic. "It is a national scandal," he said. "There is
plenty of capacity for making these signs in our excellent home-grown
industry. My cousin wasn’t even asked to quote for the job."
He then outlined a rival Conservative plan to control trolley waiting times
with a pay-and-display system, limiting waits to a maximum of two hours. The
scheme would be administered by a national team of Trolley Wardens, who would
have the power to clamp or tow away patients who overstayed their time.
He denied government claims that this was a stealth tax, adding that the
cost of one hour’s waiting would be redeemable against sugar-free beverages
and wholemeal sandwiches in each hospital’s cafeteria.
Asked whether Disabled Parking Permits could be used on trolleys, he
replied: "Don’t be ridiculous. We can’t have sick cripples cluttering up our
hospitals."