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1 hour ago, ICTChris said:

Had my surgery earlier, all seems fine. I think the anaesthetic had the most impact.

The surgeon said I can go back to gym in two weeks.

I’m getting this done in a private hospital, paid for by the NHS as a waiting list clear,  and the difference between an NHS hospital and this is stark. The care, nursing etc is just the same as I’ve seen others get in NHS hospitals but being in my own room with better facilities and more privacy makes the whole thing easier. The food was significantly better than NGS food as well. Made the whole thing a lot better.

I’ve not seen a bill though, I imagine that I’d look at it differently if I was shelling out several thousand quid.

I never knew you were a Dawson Park Boy alias...

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48 minutes ago, scottsdad said:

I never knew you were a Dawson Park Boy alias...

Ha! I was happy to wait but the NHS sent me there. If I had to pay I would never have been there.

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On 04/01/2024 at 16:27, ICTChris said:

Had my surgery earlier, all seems fine. I think the anaesthetic had the most impact.

The surgeon said I can go back to gym in two weeks.

I’m getting this done in a private hospital, paid for by the NHS as a waiting list clear,  and the difference between an NHS hospital and this is stark. The care, nursing etc is just the same as I’ve seen others get in NHS hospitals but being in my own room with better facilities and more privacy makes the whole thing easier. The food was significantly better than NGS food as well. Made the whole thing a lot better.

I’ve not seen a bill though, I imagine that I’d look at it differently if I was shelling out several thousand quid.

That's rather the issue - without the NHS as competition, private operations would cost a whole lot more than the few thousand quid they might do it for now. They're in the "winning hearts and minds" stage of the battle for our money.

It's a real eye-opener when you see the costs involved in treatment in America, especially when you bear in mind that insurance companies are experts at wiggling out of paying for it, and switching to another insurer can suddenly leave you paying for your own medicine at hundreds of dollars per month due to your pre-existing conditions.

5 minutes ago, Miguel Sanchez said:

I think I'm developing an ingrown toenail. Does anyone have any tips?

Shoes that don't put pressure on your toes. Ideally open-toed sandals or similar when you're not at work. Gently push the flesh at the sides of the nail back away from the nail in the morning and night. Get toothpicks and gently lever the nail out of the flesh. Don't trim the nail below the flesh at the sides. Soak your feet regularly in salt water to help with infection. If your nails are particularly wide, it might be worth seeing a paediatrician privately to cut away the excess nail at the sides and kill the nail bed at the base to prevent it growing back, as the NHS will only remove/kill the whole nail altogether.

The first Mrs BFTD and our son had terrible ingrown nails; the latter was due to having very wide nails on his big toes. Both had to have their nails removed, so follow at your own risk, although I promise I was just using the advice I was given by doctors  :lol:

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18 minutes ago, BFTD said:

That's rather the issue - without the NHS as competition, private operations would cost a whole lot more than the few thousand quid they might do it for now. They're in the "winning hearts and minds" stage of the battle for our money.

It's a real eye-opener when you see the costs involved in treatment in America, especially when you bear in mind that insurance companies are experts at wiggling out of paying for it, and switching to another insurer can suddenly leave you paying for your own medicine at hundreds of dollars per month due to your pre-existing conditions.

Shoes that don't put pressure on your toes. Ideally open-toed sandals or similar when you're not at work. Gently push the flesh at the sides of the nail back away from the nail in the morning and night. Get toothpicks and gently lever the nail out of the flesh. Don't trim the nail below the flesh at the sides. Soak your feet regularly in salt water to help with infection. If your nails are particularly wide, it might be worth seeing a paediatrician privately to cut away the excess nail at the sides and kill the nail bed at the base to prevent it growing back, as the NHS will only remove/kill the whole nail altogether.

The first Mrs BFTD and our son had terrible ingrown nails; the latter was due to having very wide nails on his big toes. Both had to have their nails removed, so follow at your own risk, although I promise I was just using the advice I was given by doctors  :lol:

It only started last week so it's just a bit red and swollen. It's also the second toe, not the big one. I gave them a steep this evening, I'll do that a few more times and see if anything changes.

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20 minutes ago, BFTD said:

That's rather the issue - without the NHS as competition, private operations would cost a whole lot more than the few thousand quid they might do it for now. They're in the "winning hearts and minds" stage of the battle for our money.

It's a real eye-opener when you see the costs involved in treatment in America, especially when you bear in mind that insurance companies are experts at wiggling out of paying for it, and switching to another insurer can suddenly leave you paying for your own medicine at hundreds of dollars per month due to your pre-existing conditions.

Shoes that don't put pressure on your toes. Ideally open-toed sandals or similar when you're not at work. Gently push the flesh at the sides of the nail back away from the nail in the morning and night. Get toothpicks and gently lever the nail out of the flesh. Don't trim the nail below the flesh at the sides. Soak your feet regularly in salt water to help with infection. If your nails are particularly wide, it might be worth seeing a paediatrician privately to cut away the excess nail at the sides and kill the nail bed at the base to prevent it growing back, as the NHS will only remove/kill the whole nail altogether.

The first Mrs BFTD and our son had terrible ingrown nails; the latter was due to having very wide nails on his big toes. Both had to have their nails removed, so follow at your own risk, although I promise I was just using the advice I was given by doctors  :lol:

Do you mean podiatrist rather than paediatric doctor?!

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1 minute ago, Miguel Sanchez said:

It only started last week so it's just a bit red and swollen. It's also the second toe, not the big one. I gave them a steep this evening, I'll do that a few more times and see if anything changes.

Maybe just gave it a knock. I have to be careful with work boots as I think my second toes are a little longer than average, so the nails can rub against the toecaps and become uncomfortable.

The smaller toes are usually much easier to deal with, so hopefully you'll be fine.

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1 minute ago, RH33 said:

Do you mean podiatrist rather than paediatric doctor?!

f**k's sake. I'm blaming autocorrect, even though that was me just being an idiot.

 

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Fascinating to read about hernia ops of all things on here. Had no idea this thread existed. 

I was in the Western in Edinburgh getting a paristomal hernia repair with mesh done on December 28th. Got out two days later, in no small part because of the ward I was on. Absolutely horrific experience, which meant I pretty much discharged myself.

It was my third hernia op - the first attempt was 2010 and was the same as ICTChris’s experience, as it was carried out at the Spire at Murrayfield due to needing to get me off the waiting list. The place was palatial, but the operation itself was a complete botch job. Had a second much bigger op a year later which led to me having to leave my job, but at least it was a (relative) success. 

All the best in your recovery @ICTChris

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2 hours ago, Miguel Sanchez said:

I think I'm developing an ingrown toenail. Does anyone have any tips?

My brother in law got one (on his big toe) removed pre-covid and it still looks weird these days. 
 

Not much help but thought I’d share regardless 

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13 hours ago, Miguel Sanchez said:

I think I'm developing an ingrown toenail. Does anyone have any tips?

In my teens I had one. In those days my GP dealt with it. Numbed my toe, got some fancy scissors and removed the right hand side of my toenail. Right in his office, in and out in a few minutes.

Then, when my wife had one it was a whole hospital appointment to do the same thing.  

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14 hours ago, Miguel Sanchez said:

I think I'm developing an ingrown toenail. Does anyone have any tips?

Not sure about your Health Board, but in the Highlands we have a self referral service to NHS Podiatry. Might be worth enquiring. I had an Ingrowing big toenail, riddled with toenail fungus, all quite disgusting. Filled, and handed in a form, they called a day a so later with an appointment for the next week. When I went in they were all ready to remove the toenail, which was all done in 45 minutes. All in all, a very good service.

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57 minutes ago, scottsdad said:

In my teens I had one. In those days my GP dealt with it. Numbed my toe, got some fancy scissors and removed the right hand side of my toenail. Right in his office, in and out in a few minutes.

Then, when my wife had one it was a whole hospital appointment to do the same thing.  

Sybil Fawlty was in overnight for hers.

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6 hours ago, scottsdad said:

In my teens I had one. In those days my GP dealt with it. Numbed my toe, got some fancy scissors and removed the right hand side of my toenail. Right in his office, in and out in a few minutes.

Then, when my wife had one it was a whole hospital appointment to do the same thing.  

Different times. When a young Roald Dahl needed his tonsils out, his GP distracted him and quickly slashed away at the roof of his mouth with a scalpel. When I was three and had constipation, a locum fisted me in case I'd been sticking golf balls up my arse (I had not).

Deviants and sadists used to have a lot more leeway in medicine.

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Recent development. Since surgery in August, and PT for a week (my scabby insurance won't cover out-patient PT) Within 3 - 5 minutes of doing anything that involves being upright I begin to get severe pain in my back by my right shoulder blade. Could be muscular (due to loss of muscle/weight after being eviscerated) but the doctor sent me for x-rays just in case.

Turns out I have signs of arthritic degeneration in the spine and also mild scoliosis.

Ach well, back pain isn't terminal AFAIK.

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