OUT IN THE FIELD: A&E isn't there to kiss it better
While on the subject of Diesel Alley, I do hope some provision is being made for the bus drivers who have been displaced with the closure of various premises along Terminus Road ahead of the Arndale extension and no longer have anywhere to rest their wearies or have a smoke break. They look so forlorn in all weathers standing outside the old Argos shop with nowhere to go...
The dispute between Southern Rail and drivers and conductors rumbles on, and I hear that as well as the shoe repair man and cafe owner in the railway station feeling a dent in their takings, independent taxi drivers who wait for pick ups outside the station are getting cross and are now also feeling the pinch, with fewer customers especially on strike days when the station is deserted. This week a British Transport Police van was parked outside the station all day and BTP officers were inside the station in case, one presumes, to intervene should a war of words break out between the striking staff on the picket line and the disgruntled cabbies.
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Hide AdThere’s been plenty in the news this week about the pressures on hospital accident and emergency departments and our own DGH is no exception. Too many people either forget or are unaware that A&E is for genuine life-threatening emergencies, such as loss of consciousness, persistent, severe chest pain, breathing difficulties, severe bleeding that cannot be stopped, severe allergic reactions, severe burns or scalds or fits that are not stopping. Always remember: A&E is not an alternative to a GP appointment and put quite simply, A&E isn’t there to kiss it better either.
And finally this week: it’s not my half a century celebrations until next year but plenty of my friends and loved ones have their 50th birthdays coming up in 2017 and the first is my young at heart friend and former school chum Keith King, who turns the big five-o on Sunday. Happy birthday Keith.
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