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Taking the P155

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    Taking the P155

    NHS client urgently seeking to recruit a Project Manager / IT Manager. You will be responsible for delivering a number of small IT projects and managing a team of 7 developers. You must have at least 12 months experience is Project or IT Management and have a knowledge of IT Applications. It is also essential that you have at least 3 months NHS experience. This role is initially a 6 month contract with a permanent option available after that period.

    They want to pay £18 p/h max!!!!!! Jeez.
    What happens in General, stays in General.
    You know what they say about assumptions!

    #2
    Rofl

    Comment


      #3
      Having spent 9 months working for a consultancy at a recently announced and soon to be partially outsourced arm of the NHS I can see why the thing is on its @rse. The financial mismanagement in the place is almost criminal.

      We had instances where trusts were paying suppliers about 2 million per year but could not tell us what they got for their (our) cash. We had cases where suppliers sent quarterly invoices with just a figure outstanding and with no breakdown as to what they were paying for and the trusts paid up. We had cases where two trusts would buy exactly the same ICD (like a pacemaker) and one would pay £17k and another would get it for £12k.
      Rule Number 1 - Assuming that you have a valid contract in place always try to get your poo onto your timesheet, provided that the timesheet is valid for your current contract and covers the period of time that you are billing for.

      I preferred version 1!

      Comment


        #4
        mailman prints off invoice for NHS so they can pay him lots of money for doing nothing...almost as if he worked there

        Mailman

        Comment


          #5
          There's a reasonably interesting brief analysis of gummint IT failure (including NHS's NPfIT) in The Times today, here:

          The cycle of cover-ups and failure that costs us millions.

          It includes an anecdote about the Criminal Records Bureau system.

          Comment


            #6
            Originally posted by wendigo100
            There's a reasonably interesting brief analysis of gummint IT failure (including NHS's NPfIT) in The Times today, here:

            The cycle of cover-ups and failure that costs us millions.

            It includes an anecdote about the Criminal Records Bureau system.
            Old Mother Hewitt was on R4 Today this morning.

            Jim Naughty confronted her with the fact that all large-scale NHS IT projects are invariably unmitigated disasters.

            Hewitt deftly countered saying the the NHS's investment (i.e. haemorrhaging of tax-payers money) into IT had produced miracles such as MRI scanners!

            WTF???

            Sadly, old Naughty, out of his depth once more, let it lie.

            You've come right out the other side of the forest of irony and ended up in the desert of wrong.

            Comment


              #7
              the fact is that there are more cat scans in California than the whole of the UK. Also, the ones we do have are not utilised to their maximum.

              From the beeb

              Concerns over private NHS clinics

              Cataract surgery is one of the operations carried out by ISTCs
              Private clinics doing NHS operations have not carried out all the treatment they have been paid for, figures show.
              Independent sector treatment centres have been phased in since 2002 to drive down waiting lists and increase choice.

              But statistics obtained by the Tories showed 59,960 procedures - 73% of the number paid for - were done by April.

              The Tories said the clinics were not providing value for money, but the government said the shortfall now stood at 87% and would be made up in time.

              The clinics carry out minor surgery, including hip operations, ear, nose and throat treatment and cataract operations.

              The government has involved the independent sector without delivering value for money

              Andrew Lansley, shadow health secretary

              The Tories say the under-performance is because the first-wave of ISTCs were given guaranteed levels of work, meaning they get paid regardless of the amount of work they carry out.

              Shadow health secretary Andrew Lansley said: "The government has involved the independent sector without delivering value for money.

              "Centres are not working to their optimum capacity and cost significantly more than the same service provided by the NHS."

              Doctors agreed the figures were worrying.

              Money

              Paul Miller, chairman of the British Medical Association, said: "This shows what we have been saying for a long time.

              "They have got preferential treatment of the kind the NHS can only dream of. The money spent on them would have been best invested in the NHS."

              But the Department of Health said the situation had already started improving, with 87% of treatment paid for being carried out by July.

              A spokesman added: "It's wrong to suggest that money has been wasted. No money has been lost.

              "ISTC contracts are calculated over five years, not month by month or year by year.

              "This means that any under-referral early on - while local GPs and patients are getting used to the new facility - is made up by the end of the five-year contract."

              It comes after the Commons' health committee recently warned the centres had not brought a "major benefit" to the NHS and could actually end up starving hospitals of work and, therefore, money.
              Last edited by BoredBloke; 19 September 2006, 13:58.
              Rule Number 1 - Assuming that you have a valid contract in place always try to get your poo onto your timesheet, provided that the timesheet is valid for your current contract and covers the period of time that you are billing for.

              I preferred version 1!

              Comment


                #8
                Should we not disband the NHS and adopt a insurance based approach to health care?
                How fortunate for governments that the people they administer don't think

                Comment


                  #9
                  Originally posted by Troll
                  Should we not disband the NHS and adopt a insurance based approach to health care?
                  We do. It's called Private Medical Insurance. The NHS is for the immigrants and under-classes only. Permie!
                  Illegitimus non carborundum est!

                  Comment


                    #10
                    Originally posted by bogeyman
                    Old Mother Hewitt was on R4 Today this morning.

                    Jim Naughty confronted her with the fact that all large-scale NHS IT projects are invariably unmitigated disasters.

                    Hewitt deftly countered saying the the NHS's investment (i.e. haemorrhaging of tax-payers money) into IT had produced miracles such as MRI scanners!

                    WTF???

                    Sadly, old Naughty, out of his depth once more, let it lie.
                    Bogey - I've noticed this alot recently: there we have an almighty clusterfuck of government incompetence that even your slack-jawed, minger infested, dole engourged, blinged up chav can contemplate, and the BBC anchormen fire a warning shot across the bows, get faced with a government prepared soundbite and never take it any further.

                    We need to take a leaf out of the common Hungarian man's solution - invade the fecking studios and broadcast the truth.
                    Last edited by hyperD; 19 September 2006, 14:06.
                    If you think my attitude stinks, you should smell my fingers.

                    Comment

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