Private Health Care in Indonesia

indo0001-218x300

Sick of your patients waiting in the ED for life saving treatment as a result of interminable ICU / CCU bed-block? Worry no more…move to Indonesia

The man from Snowy River meets the 4 hour rule

snowy river

The Man from Snowy River or The Man that is intellectually disabled, violent, and age inappropriate for a Nursing Home…challenges the 4 hour rule in South Australia

UCEM Helps Bedbound Nation

gas mask crowd

UCEM’s Egerton Y. Davis IV arrived today to help resolve the stagnant Federal Infection that is keeping Australia bed-bound with a well hung Parliament.

Utopian Waiting Room

Utopian Waiting Room 2010 copy

With increasing ED crowding and ever increasing waiting the Utopian College has produced guidelines to improve patient comfort and safety and to begin diagnosis and treatment for those stable and well enough to enjoy time within the waiting room – Waiting Room Medicine.

When the elephant awakens…

long queue

A chronic shortfall in doctors has led to a great increase in new medical graduates in Australia. What does this mean for emergency medicine and the training of junior doctors?

An Empty Hospital?

Some things remain the same, some things change. Political machinations and bureaucratic bungles seem to be universal constants. However, empty hospitals no longer seem to be an issue…

Underfunded and Overcrowded

Will the Prime Minister follow up on his election pledge to take over all public hospitals in Australia?

Can we fix our ailing hospital emergency departments?

Insight

The title of the discussion was broad – ‘Can we fix our ailing hospital emergency departments?‘ – but thanks to extensive background research and a well-drilled production team – a large proportion of the important issues were dealt with.

The Four Hour Rule comes to Australia

WA health has taken another bold step in its continued quest to drive ‘long term system wide reform’ and implement strategies which will enhance the patient experience and ‘flow’ through the turbulent waters of ‘unscheduled care’.

Myth-conceptions of ER overcrowding

Myth-conceptions of ER overcrowding