The orders -- which record an advance decision that a patient's life should not be saved if their heart stops -- are routinely being applied without the knowledge of the patient or their relatives.
On one ward, one-third of DNR orders were issued without consultation with the patient or their family, according to the NHS's own records. At another hospital, junior doctors freely admitted that the forms were filled out by medical teams without the involvement of patients or relatives.
Under medical guidelines, the orders should only be issued after senior staff have discussed the matter with the patient's family. A form, signed by two doctors, is then placed in the patient's notes to record what decision was taken.
The findings emerged in spot checks of 100 hospitals undertaken by the Care Quality Commission (CQC), an official watchdog, earlier this year.
A charity for the elderly said the disclosures were evidence of "euthanasia by the backdoor," with potentially-lethal notices being placed on the files of patients simply because they were old and frail.
#2
Hmm... someone had a name for this sort of thing in the US about 2-3 years ago. Now what was it. She was derived as a foolish, emotional, know-nothing and ridiculed by the media and hollywood establishment for daring to use it.
It's a funny thing. I actually remember when people used to die from heart attacks when they were fairly young. It was just a part of life, and a good reason to buy insurance and live a 'good' life. And it wasn't very long ago. Just about the time we started spending way beyond our means. Perhaps we're heading back to those simpler days, you never know.
Road accidents way up, so Britain to stop giving road tests in foreign languages.
Transport minister Mike Penning told The Daily Telegraph he was working out how to implement a ban on foreign language tests without the new regulations falling foul of anti-discrimination legislation. 'I find it incredible that Labour thought it was a god idea to let people without a basis grasp of English loose on our roads,' he said.
A Department For Transport source said there had recently been a spate of crashes involving Polish-speaking drivers.
Government figures showed that last year around seven per cent of theory tests were taken in a foreign language - almost 19,000 of them were in Urdu, 13,000 in Polish and 298 in Albanian. For the practical tests 452 Romanians, 230 Russians and 21 Bulgarians used translators, while more than 1,500 bus drivers took a theory test in a foreign language.
According to transport officials other European countries do not routinely allow people to sit driving tests in foreign languages.
Continued on Page 47
#1
Kind of think this was the kind of thing a United Europe would have stream-lined long ago. Even a disunited Europe where travel was frequent should have created a more or less unified signage by now. Certainly there would be local differences (English and their round-abouts for example) but these would be minor and could be covered by brochures at the border (or the rental car place).
#2
I drove all over Europe (except in Britain - I'm not stupid) and never had a problem with the signs even in the countries where I didn't speak the language - and this was before the U.S. adopted universal signage.
Perhaps it's not the signs but the foreigners involved ....?
I'd also bet it has something to do - at least for the Poles - with the fact that the Brits drive on the wrong side of the road. That would have to be very confusing, particularly if you're driving a standard left-hand drive truck or car. I remember what it was like in Bermuda, and that was just on a scooter. I finally decided that if it looked "normal" to me, I was on the wrong side of the road for there, and started enjoying my ride.
"According to transport officials other European countries do not routinely allow people to sit driving tests in foreign languages."
Duh.
Posted by: Barbara ||
10/16/2011 12:35 Comments ||
Top||
#3
Lousy and dangerous drivers in Poland tend be like that in other countries too. This may not be a language problem. Modern countries should use driving simulators to test license applicants, not written tests.
A multi-volume chronology and reference guide set detailing three years of the Mexican Drug War between 2010 and 2012.
Rantburg.com and borderlandbeat.com correspondent and author Chris Covert presents his first non-fiction work detailing
the drug and gang related violence in Mexico.
Chris gives us Mexican press dispatches of drug and gang war violence
over three years, presented in a multi volume set intended to chronicle the death, violence and mayhem which has
dominated Mexico for six years.
Rantburg was assembled from recycled algorithms in the United States of America. No
trees were destroyed in the production of this weblog. We did hurt some, though. Sorry.