The British government has a policy of ignoring the needs of the
elderly, with doctors and nurses instructed to withhold treatment and
let old people die to save hospital beds and cut costs.
The cut-off age for resuscitation is often 55 or 50, with anyone over 60 considered old and a burden on society.
Elderly
patients are frequently left in pain, in soiled bed clothes, and denied
food and water, with many cases of neglect, abuse and unfair treatment
reported in hospitals and care homes.
“The only -ism that no one cares about is ageism."
In
Britain, it is now official Government policy to ignore the needs of
the elderly. This policy is common throughout the world. Doctors and
nurses are told to let old people die – and to withhold treatment which
might save their lives. Hospital staff are told to deprive the elderly
of food and water so that they die rather than take up hospital beds.
Nursing home staff have even been given the right to sedate elderly
patients without their knowledge. The only -ism that no one cares about
is ageism.
But at what age are patients simply allowed to die?
And how old is too old for patients to be resuscitated? At what point
does society have the right to say `You’ve lived long enough, now you
must die and make way for someone else’? And why should resuscitation be
decided by age? It is possible to argue that it would make as much
sense to decide according to wealth or beauty. But ageism is now
officially accepted. Anyone over 60 is now officially old, though in a
growing number of hospitals the cut-off age for resuscitation is 55 or
even 50.
We live in a politically correct world but the elderly
don’t count – particularly if they are white and English. Report after
report after report shows elderly patients being left in pain, in soiled
bed clothes. Elderly patients in hospital are ignored by staff and left
to starve to death, denied even water if they cannot get out of bed and
fetch it themselves.
Old people are a burden which the
Government cannot afford and so the politicians will continue to
authorise whatever methods are necessary to ensure that the number of
burdensome old people is kept to a minimum. The existence of an absurd
branch of medicine called geriatrics is used as an excuse to shove old
people into backwater wards and to provide them with second-rate medical
treatment. In February 2011, an official report condemned the NHS for
its “inhumane treatment of elderly patients” and stated that NHS
hospitals were “failing to meet even the most basic standards of care”
for the over-65s. It is no exaggeration to say that the NHS treats the
elderly with contempt. (It used to be said that you can judge a
civilisation by the way it treats its elderly.)....<<<Read More>>>....
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